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First slip for champions Barca in Rayo draw
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Imam-ul-Haq's hundred for Yorkshire in vain as Hampshire win One-Day Cup semi-final
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Yemen's Huthi rebels detain at least 11 UN staff
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Sudan army strike kills at least 12 in Darfur: monitors
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Barca hold on for draw against impressive Rayo
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Debt-ridden Lyon beat Marseille to share summit with PSG in France
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Hometown hero Newgarden wins IndyCar season-ender in Nashville
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Alcaraz into US Open quarter-finals as Pegula advances
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Struggling African giants Ahly sack Spanish coach Riveiro
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Guardians pitchers Clase and Ortiz out 'until further notice'
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Inter stunned by Udinese, defiant Vlahovic decisive for Juve
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Taiwanese-American NBA pioneer Jeremy Lin retires at age 37
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Champions New Zealand, Springboks, into Women's Rugby World Cup quarter-finals
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Liverpool show Arsenal killer instinct of champions, says Arteta
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Escape room helps Pegula into US Open last eight
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Defiant Vlahovic shoots Juventus to victory at Genoa
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Pegula swats Li to reach US Open quarter-finals
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From music to marijuana, US Open 'circus' challenges players
Whether it's the thumping music, the rowdy spectators or the aroma of marijuana, maintaining concentration presents a huge challenge for players at the world's most raucous Grand Slam.
"There's a lot of noise this year," said France's Adrian Mannarino.
Mannarino, 37, who is playing in the main draw at Flushing Meadows for the 15th time, wondered whether the distractions are too much.
"I find it's a bit of a circus on the court: people move between games, sometimes between points. We let everything happen a little too much. It's still tennis, not football!" he said.
Mannarino was speaking after his second round match on the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center's Court 11, where noise from the giant, 23,859-capacity Arthur Ashe Stadium nearby -- the largest arena in tennis -- can be a distraction.
"When a match ends on (Ashe), the music is blaring, people are making noise... it makes it harder for all the players to concentrate," lamented the left-hander.
- Hostile environment -
The unrelenting background noise is a far cry from the religious silence prevailing at Grand Slam venues like Wimbledon's Centre Court.
Yet the background din doesn't bother world No. 4 Jessica Pegula in the least.
"I don't really get bothered by crowd or fan movement and stuff like that," said Pegula, a US Open finalist last year, who expressed sympathy with spectators who are prevented from entering the arena when games are underway.
"I hate when you're standing outside and it's two really long games and you have to wait for a changeover," she said. "From a fan perspective to have to wait and miss, like, a huge part of the match, that's not fun."
Last year tournament organisers moved to relax restrictions on fan movement, allowing spectators to come and go more freely depending on their proximity to the court.
At its most unruly -- often during late night matches on Ashe, when many spectators are well-lubricated by alcohol -- the New York crowd can be downright hostile.
In a stormy first round match last week, France's Benjamin Bonzi was forced to wait six minutes before being able to serve on match point as waves of catcalls and jeers rained down from the stands over a perceived umpiring injustice against his opponent, Russia's Daniil Medvedev.
"I was in a very good position, it was match point," Bonzi said. "Every time I approached the baseline to serve, everyone booed me. I don't think I did anything during the match to deserve such treatment," the world number 51 said.
- 'Weird' but 'amazing' -
"It's very difficult to play tennis when you can't hear the sound of the ball, the shots," he concluded.
Facing the seventh-seeded Novak Djokovic on Arthur Ashe on Friday, Britain's Cameron Norrie said the noise prevented him from being able to communicate with his team in the stands.
"It's like a constant chatter of people talking," Norrie said, describing the atmosphere as "amazing" albeit "weird."
"In any other court, you would be stopping to play, but you kind of have to be ready to play. I was trying to talk to my team a little bit and I couldn't even hear what they were saying," Norrie said.
Aside from the din in the stands, players competing in the final Grand Slam of the season also have to contend with the ballet of planes taking off and landing at LaGuardia Airport, and the screeching of the nearby subway, which ferries fans to and from Flushing Meadows.
The constant bustle of the city that never sleeps is in sharp contrast to the more serene settings of other Grand Slam events, whether it's the bucolic setting of the Bois de Boulogne in Paris, the meandering beauty of the Yarra River in Melbourne or the leafy suburbs of Wimbledon.
In addition to the noise, players must also contend with the occasional scent of marijuana wafting over Flushing Meadows, particularly on Court 17, which borders a park.
Several players have commented on the issue over the years, with world number three Alexander Zverev stating that playing on Court 17 was like "being in Snoop Dogg's living room", in a reference to the marijuana-using US rapper.
B.Finley--AMWN