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Indeed, Golubev went for everything and forced the action with Nadal. Golubev finished with 41 winners and 59 unforced errors compared to 18 and 16 for Nadal.
He moved Nadal around, kept him hitting from well behind the baseline and had more than his share of chances to capture momentum, a set, maybe even the match.
"If you don't think about the points, it was not bad performance," he said. "I mean, you have to win the points when you have to win. For example, like second set or third set when you serve for the set."
But he didn't, and Nadal moved on for a second-round match against Frenchman Nicolas Mahut -- he of the famous 70-68 fifth set against John Isner at Wimbledon last year.
Isner, 21st-seeded Andy Roddick, fourth-seeded Andy Murray and 2009 champion Juan Martin del Potro are among those who play first-round matches Wednesday, while Venus Williams and third-seeded Maria Sharapova will play their second rounds in Arthur Ashe Stadium.
Other winners on the women's side Tuesday included No. 4 Victoria Azarenka, No. 10 Andrea Petkovic, No. 11 Jelena Jankovic and three young Americans: Sloane Stephens, Coco Vandeweghe and Vania King.
Two seeded men lost: No. 16 Mikhail Youzhny was beaten by Ernests Gulbis of Latvia 6-2, 6-4, 6-4, and No. 32 Ivan Dodig was eliminated 6-7 (6), 6-3, 6-0, 2-6, 6-2 by Nikolay Davydenko of Russia, who was a U.S. Open semifinalist in 2006 and 2007 and has slid from third in the rankings to 39th.
No. 5 David Ferrer and Americans James Blake and Donald Young were among the men who advanced.
As did Nadal -- though nothing seemed easy on this day. He is regaining confidence after a summer in which he didn't play much and lost early in his two U.S. Open tuneups.
"You have to find your confidence," he said. "The confidence is spending hours on court, competing better, winning matches. Today was one of the matches."
[Associated Press;
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