The best fashion aces from the '19 Australian Open



In Adidas, it's Naomi"Ombre" Osaka for the win.

Right up the T: Simona Halep, Sloane Stephens, Petra Kvitova and a few others garner kudos for their vintage-y tops. Half a style point for each of these looks; meanwhile, let's burn that dark denim skirt.

Whether it's green or blue in your view, Roger Federer's Uniqlo kit remains a stately vision to behold.

Best Practice Attire

Aryna Sabalenka, in Nike, shows off that camouflage will always be current. In new sponsor Hydrogen, Tomas Berdych serves up attitude in spades with a loud tee befitting his alternative sensibility.

Rocking New Balance, surprise semifinalist Danielle Collins delivers in strong horizontal stripes that properly play off her fiery on-court disposition.

The Nike dress seems a take on tie-dye, and while it sort of sends a sweat-stain message, Maria Sharapova can probably wear next to anything with confidence. Like her upset of Wozniacki, this emerges victorious.

Best Superfan Style

Anna Wintour. Prada yellow. The end.

Sound off on your own style winners, and losers, by tweeting us at tennis or jonscott9.

In Adidas, it's Naomi"Ombre" Osaka for the win.

Kick off each day of the 2019 Australian Open with Tennis Channel Live, reviewing the day’s most important news and previewing the day’s biggest matches.

Follow the Australian Open all week long on Tennis Channel and TENNIS.com

Whether it's green or blue in your view, Roger Federer's Uniqlo kit remains a stately vision to behold.

Best Practice Attire

Aryna Sabalenka, in Nike, shows off that camouflage will always be current. In new sponsor Hydrogen, Tomas Berdych serves up attitude in spades with a loud tee befitting his alternative sensibility.

Best Superfan Style

Anna Wintour. Prada yellow. The end.

Sound off on your own style winners, and losers, by tweeting us at tennis or jonscott9.

Kick off each day of the 2019 Australian Open with Tennis Channel Live, reviewing the day’s most important news and previewing the day’s biggest matches.

Follow the Australian Open all week long on Tennis Channel and TENNIS.com

The 2019 season has truly kick-started with the Melbourne heat beating down on the Australian Open's entrants and the sensational stars of tennis beating the stuffing out of the ball. And with that, they make their initial major-tournament style statements to boot. Here's a look at the fashion coming up roses Down Under:

In Adidas teal blue, Caroline Wozniacki's got a good gradient thing going on. A pity that the sartorial wizardry of Woz didn't make the second week.

Likewise outfitted in Adidas, Dominic Thiem rocks the comparable men's version of Wozniacki's look, leaning even more green and coming off fresh.

Rafael Nadal surprises in a golden tank by Nike, with white trim, the usual shoe-sock accoutrements and confidence/muscles for days.

Serena Williams made a full-stop statement with her green Nike "playsuit." The operative question was whether she was harking back to her notorious 2002 US Open one-piece or winkingly referencing a WTA pal.

Looking lean in green, Milos Raonic sports New Balance in shades complementary with the blue hard-court surface he pounds with both his kicks and his kick-serves.

No one in the Nike stable looks better in that polo than does Grigor Dimitrov.

Bethanie Mattek-Sands' collaboration with the Lucky in Love line arrives as perhaps not the epitome of fashion but a smart, spunky ensemble that continues to assure that the last thing she will ever be, or look, is boring.

Right up the T: Simona Halep, Sloane Stephens, Petra Kvitova and a few others garner kudos for their vintage-y tops. Half a style point for each of these looks; meanwhile, let's burn that dark denim skirt.

Rocking New Balance, surprise semifinalist Danielle Collins delivers in strong horizontal stripes that properly play off her fiery on-court disposition.

The Nike dress seems a take on tie-dye, and while it sort of sends a sweat-stain message, Maria Sharapova can probably wear next to anything with confidence. Like her upset of Wozniacki, this emerges victorious.

In Adidas, it's Naomi"Ombre" Osaka for the win.

Whether it's green or blue in your view, Roger Federer's Uniqlo kit remains a stately vision to behold.

Best Practice Attire

Aryna Sabalenka, in Nike, shows off that camouflage will always be current. In new sponsor Hydrogen, Tomas Berdych serves up attitude in spades with a loud tee befitting his alternative sensibility.

Best Superfan Style

Anna Wintour. Prada yellow. The end.

Sound off on your own style winners, and losers, by tweeting us at tennis or jonscott9.

Kick off each day of the 2019 Australian Open with Tennis Channel Live, reviewing the day’s most important news and previewing the day’s biggest matches.

Follow the Australian Open all week long on Tennis Channel and TENNIS.com