Nadal survives scare, Sharapova serves up storm
Rafael Nadal's bid for an historic eighth French Open title was
almost spectacularly derailed on Monday by big-hitting German Daniel
Brands.
But there were no such problems for defending women's champion Maria
Sharapova who eased past Taiwan's Hsieh Su-Wei in just 54 minutes,
surrendering only eight points on serve.
Seven-time champion Nadal dropped the opening set of a Grand Slam for
the first time in his career before he prevailed 4-6, 7-6 (7/4), 6-4,
6-3 against a player who had lost all four of his previous matches in
Paris.
The Spaniard, who before this year had only lost once in 53 outings
at Roland Garros, came into the tournament having won six titles in
eight finals since he returned from a seventh-month injury lay-off.
But the 26-year-old was caught cold by world number 59 Brands who
unleashed a fearless barrage of attacks off both sides to leave the
third seed reeling.
It was almost a carbon copy of the tactics employed by Robin
Soderling, the only man to beat Nadal in Paris four years ago, and Lukas
Rosol, who dumped the Spaniard out of Wimbledon last year.
Brands even led 3/0 in the second set tie-breaker as he appeared
poised to deliver the first defeat of a men's champion in the opening
round in tournament history.
But Nadal eventually found his rhythm to steady the ship as the
25-year-old German eventually ran out of firepower.
"He was playing unbelievable. I tried to find my game and tried to
resist his fantastic shots," said Nadal, who will face Martin Klizan of
Slovakia for a place in the last 32 "He played a great match and put me
in a tricky situation." Czech fifth seed Tomas Berdych was the biggest
casualty of the day when the 2010 semi-finalist fell to French wildcard
Gael Monfils.
Monfils, whose career has been plagued recently by a knee injury,
triumphed 7-6 (10/8), 6-4, 6-7 (3/7), 6-7 (4/7), 7-5 in a shade over
four hours.
The flamboyant 26-year-old Frenchman, a semi-finalist in 2008, will
next tackle in-form Ernests Gulbis.
"There was the adrenaline and the match and the crowd, but I didn't
think I would do this well," said Monfils, who was fresh from a
runners-up place in Nice at the weekend.
"It was a match up there in my top five." Sharapova brushed past
hapless world number 42 Hsieh, 6-2, 6-1 and will next face Canadian
teenager Eugenie Bouchard.
Sharapova, who completed a career Grand Slam in Paris in 2012, fired
25 winners to Hsieh's eight and kept her unforced errors to just four
against 24.
The Russian second seed had her match shifted to Court Suzanne
Lenglen while Monfils and Berdych slugged it out on Court Philippe
Chatrier.
"I wanted to finish tonight; it was a good decision to switch courts
especially when I saw the guys were still playing," she said.
Sharapova was joined in the next round by three former champions --
Li Na, Svetlana Kuznetsova and Francesca Schiavone.
Li, the 2011 champion, enjoyed a 6-3, 6-4 win over Anabel Medina
Garrigues, the experienced Spaniard playing in her 38th consecutive
Grand Slam event.
Li, who had lost all of her three previous meetings on clay against
Garrigues, goes on to face Bethanie Mattek-Sands of the United States.
Kuznetsova, the 2009 champion, put out fellow Russian, the 22nd
seeded Ekaterina Makarova, 6-4, 6-2.
Italy's Schiavone, the 2010 title winner, saw off Hungary's Melinda
Czink 6-0, 7-6 (7/1).
Polish fourth seed Agnieszka Radwanska, who has never got beyond the
last 16, breezed past Israel's Shahar Peer 6-1, 6-1 and will face
America's Mallory Burdette in the next round.
She is scheduled to face younger sister Urszula, who knocked out
Venus Williams on Sunday, in the third round.
Elsewhere in the men's event, French sixth seed Jo-Wilfried Tsonga,
who is looking to become the first home player to win the men's title
since Yannick Noah in 1983, started confidently enough with a 6-2, 6-2,
6-3 win over Aljaz Bedene of Slovenia.
"My groundstrokes pretty solid from the baseline. I played pretty
well, but my service was really low quality," said Tsonga.
In the women's singles, there was a first ever win in the majors for
Slovakian 20-year-old Zuzana Kucova who defeated German 24th seed Julia
Goerges 7-6 (10/8), 6-0.
Qualifier Kucova is ranked at 1,152 in the world and had lost in
qualifying on 21 occasions before making her breakthrough this week.
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