Defending champion Rafael Nadal and World No. 4 Andy Murray were among the stars left in limbo on Tuesday as rain washed out all play at the US Open.
“Cancelled,” was fourth-seeded Murray's succinct Twitter comment. On the eve of the tournament, Murray had expressed his surprise that the playing surfaces were not covered.
Murray surprised
“I don't understand why they don't just have covers. I heard that if they have covers, something to do with the paint on the court and the moisture... the court can lose colour or something,” said Murray.
“I'm sure they are thinking about doing something, but like most things, it takes a bit of time to push it through, I guess.”
The USTA issued a jam-packed order of play for Wednesday, featuring the four men's last-16 matches postponed from Tuesday and two men's quarterfinals and all four women's quarterfinals.
Other men's fourth-round matches postponed from Tuesday were fifth-seeded David Ferrer's clash with former World No. 1 Andy Roddick, and 12th-seeded Gilles Simon against 28th-seeded John Isner.
Two women's quarterfinals rescheduled from Tuesday were World No. 2 Vera Zvonareva against ninth-seeded Australian Samantha Stosur and 26th-seeded Italian Flavia Pennetta against unseeded German Angelique Kerber.
Those are now on the Wednesday slate along with World No. 1 Caroline Wozniacki v Andrea Petkovic and Serena Williams v Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova.
Welcome respite
For Stosur, an extra day off might have been a respite after two gruelling encounters.
Stosur's three-hour, 16-minute third-round victory over Nadia Petrova was the longest women's singles match recorded at the US Open since the tiebreak era began in 1970.
On Sunday, she dropped an epic second-set tiebreaker but recovered to beat Russian Maria Kirilenko 6-2, 6-7(15), 6-3.
Five-time champion Roger Federer was among the four men who beat the weather to lock up quarterfinal berths on Monday.
World No. 1 Novak Djokovic, seeking to add a first US Open crown to the Australian Open and Wimbledon titles he has already claimed this year, set up a last-eight clash with friend and Serbian Davis Cup teammate Janko Tipsarevic.
Federer will face 11th-seeded Frenchman Jo-Wilfried Tsonga — the man who rallied from two sets down to shock the Swiss great in the Wimbledon quarterfinals.
Federer didn't get on court until shortly before midnight on Monday, and misty rain was falling by the time he completed his 6-1, 6-2, 6-0 demolition of unfortunate Argentinean Juan Monaco.
Federer was pleased to be home and dry with his quarterfinal berth, especially with Tsonga already through.
“It would have been a competitive advantage for Tsonga if I hadn't finished today or not even had a chance to play,” said Federer.
Federer said he and his fellow players were used to coping with erratic schedules.
“It's crazy how our schedules change all the time,” he said.
“As tennis players, it makes it extremely difficult to be on your A game every single day, Federer added.”
Case for a roof
Rain has bedevilled the tournament in recent times with the men's final, scheduled for the last Sunday of the fortnight, carried over to Monday for the last three years.
Tuesday's downpours again sparked questions over the decision by the authorities not to follow the lead of the Australian Open and Wimbledon in building a retractable roof over its main court.
Roland Garros is also forging ahead with plans to install a retractable roof on centre court in time for the 2016 championship.