Djokovic survives Melbourne furnace to beat Monfils
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[January 18, 2018]
By Martyn Herman
MELBOURNE (Reuters) - Six-times
champion Novak Djokovic emerged from the Rod Laver Arena furnace and
into the third round of the Australian Open after putting suffering
Gael Monfils out of his misery with a scrappy victory on Thursday.
Both men struggled physically as air temperatures peaked at 39.9
degrees Celsius with reports of 69 degrees being measured down on
the court surface.
But 12-times grand slam champion Djokovic, playing his first
tournament for six months because of an elbow problem, was the more
durable as he recovered from a woeful start to claim a 4-6 6-3 6-1
6-3 win and take his record over Monfils to 15-0.
The 14th seeded Serb will play Spain's Albert Ramos-Vinolas in the
third round.
"It was brutal," Djokovic who wore a compression sleeve and employed
a truncated service action, said.
"I thought, it is going to be a big challenge for both of us. Gael
is one of the best athletes in our sport.
"It was about just hanging in there."
Monfils looked in danger of keeling over from the middle of the
second set and throughout the third -- pleading with the match
umpire to give them more than 25 seconds between points.
"I was dying on the court for 40 minutes," the 31-year-old told
reporters later after having revived in a cold tub.
"It was really warm. It was tough to breathe. I think it was the
hardest (conditions) I have played in.
"I tried to cool down. But even with the ice towel, the water, I
think my body was super warm."
Djokovic was rumored to have requested to play his match in the
middle of the afternoon, despite the predicted heatwave.
But if it was supposed to earn him an advantage that plan quickly
unraveled as he opened the match with two double faults and lost his
first two service games.
He then broke back twice to level the set.
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Novak Djokovic of Serbia celebrates winning against Gael Monfils of
France. REUTERS/Thomas Peter
"They should put this in the washing machine and start again,"
Channel Seven commentator Jim Courier, twice an Australian Open
champion, said on air about the scrappy nature of the opening
exchanges.
It did improve but Djokovic, with coach Andre Agassi watching on,
dropped serve again 3-3.
The former world number one wasted two chances to break back as
Monfils served at 5-4 and was powerless to stop the elastic-limbed
Frenchman taking the opening set with a volley after running
Djokovic ragged.
Monfils hung in for the first seven games of the second set but was
clearly in distress -- seeking out the shade behind the baselines to
catch his breath between points.
Djokovic showed no mercy and broke for 5-3 before sealing the set on
serve, at which point Monfils called the doctor and went off court
to visit the bathroom -- leaving his opponent to roast on his
courtside chair.
The third set was a non-event but Monfils burst back into life in
the fourth and despite breaking for a 5-3 lead it was Djokovic who
became flustered as he struggled to seal victory.
On his first match point Djokovic blazed a forehand long, then he
had two fend off two break points, before another match point came
and went with an unforced error.
Monfils saved a third with an angled forehand but Djokovic converted
at the fourth attempt with a volley.
(Reporting by Martyn Herman; Editing by Amlan Chakraborty and
Sudipto Ganguly)
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