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Some of the food/venue staff were good, but a lot were bad and got worse as the tournament went on. Guess what buddy, any smart phone can take video these days! It's not his fault, but the rules makers need to give their heads a shake. One security guy questioned whether our 10 year old pocket camera could take video. And yet I can buy a backpack on the grounds! I don't get it.

The downers: security - why can I not bring my small backpack into the venue, but large handbags are allowed. There were a number of uniformed greeters that welcomed you to the site when you arrived and that felt good. The weather was perfect and the transportation to the venue was quite good. Also, saw the McEnroe's, as well as Navratilova play in the 'Champions' doubles matches which were very cool. We were fortunate to see the semi -final war between Wawrinka and Djokovic, as well as the two singles finals which were great. We went to a number of matches this year and had a mixed time. Loved the tennis, loved the grounds, the stands and viewing, didn't like the poor organization. This year we got to watch 13 hours of world class tennis. Some people have given poor reviews based on their experience, but we've been a few times and its always been a great ay out.
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Best deal was a small Samsung tv screen on which you could watch the matches around the site and get commentary, so you never missed anything that was going on.
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There are also some other interesting and free things to get: this year (2013) AmEx were giving away little earpiece radios so you could get commentary on matches while you watched, and Panasonic were lending out digital cameras for the day for free. There are food concessions everywhere, and on all levels of the Ashe stadium. The Food Court is surprisingly reasonable priced (especially compared to Wimbledon) and a generous 12" hot dog and fries will set you back about $9. The outside courts are also free seating - court 17 is very good, and the Grandstand is also a good place to watch tennis at close hand. The Arthur Ashe stadium seats 23,000, all ticketed, and the seats closest to the court are really expensive, but the more distant seats offer a reasonable view, unless you're right at the top, in which case it's a good view of Manhattan! The Louis Armstrong stadium has a good number of I ticketed seats, so if there is a good match on you can get quite close to the action. Once you arrive at the stadium, which is really easy on the subway, it's a three minute walk into the grounds. Other Flushing Meadows–Corona Park attractions include the Queens Zoo, the hands-on New York Hall of Science, Queens Botanical Garden, Queens Theatre and the annual Hong Kong Dragon Boat Festival, a weekend-long sporting and cultural event held in August.It's pretty easy to get tickets for the US Open Tennis tournament, either direct or through the resale website. Inside is the not-to-be-missed Panorama of the City of New York, an impressively detailed 9,335-square-foot scale model of the City featuring every building constructed before 1992 as well as Citi Field (which in 2009 replaced Shea Stadium as the home of baseball's Mets). Nearby, the New York City Building, built for the New York City Pavilion at the 1939–1940 World's Fair and home of the General Assembly of the United Nations from 1946 to 1950, houses the recently expanded Queens Museum (formerly the Queens Museum of Art). The Unisphere, a 140-foot-tall stainless-steel globe built for the 1964–1965 World's Fair, and the observatory towers, site of the final alien fight scene in Men in Black, serve as reminders of the event. It was the site of two world's fairs (1939–19–1965).

Though best known as the location of the US Open, Flushing Meadows–Corona Park-which, at 1,255 acres, is the City's fourth-largest park-boasts a range of worthy attractions.
