Explore the US Open with quizzes covering champions, iconic matches, venues, and tournament records. You’ll review key moments from the Open Era to today, including both singles and doubles storylines. Great for tennis fans who want to sharpen their knowledge of Flushing Meadows history.

Test how well you know where the US Open has been played and what surfaces defined each era. This mixed-difficulty quiz covers venues, court changes, and key timeline details. Pick your question count and difficulty, then play at your own pace with no timer.
Test your knowledge of how the US Open actually runs—set formats, tiebreak variations, and the small rule details that decide big moments. Questions cover singles and doubles, plus what changes across eras and rounds. Pick your preferred difficulty and number of questions, then play at your own pace.

Track the history of the US Open by matching champions to the decade they won in. This quiz mixes iconic legends with a few tricky repeat winners, so you’ll need both tennis knowledge and sharp recall. Pick your preferred question count and difficulty, then play at your own pace with no timer.
There are 3 quizzes with 293 questions total.
No. Each quiz is untimed, so you can answer at your own pace.
Every question is multiple-choice with 4 answer options.
Expect champions, finals, notable matches, records, venues, and tournament history from earlier editions through recent years.
Yes. The 3 quizzes vary in difficulty and length, ranging from quick refreshers to more detailed question sets.
These US Open quizzes help you recall winners, runner-ups, notable upsets, and record-setting performances across the tournament’s modern history.
You’ll also practice recognizing players by achievements, matching years to champions, and spotting patterns like repeat finalists and dominant seasons.
Each question has 4 options and there’s no timer, so you can focus on accuracy and learning as you go.
Difficulty and length vary by quiz, with a mix of quick checks and deeper sets that cover more years, players, and statistics.
Played in New York at the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center, the US Open is known for its loud night sessions and hard-court conditions that reward both power and endurance.
The event is also notable for being the last Grand Slam of the season, where rankings, year-end momentum, and late-season fitness often shape surprising results.