The Swiss top seed, who skipped the entire
European claycourt swing to concentrate on the grasscourt
season, showed signs of rust early on against Zverev but it did
not take too long for him to rediscover his rhythm.
Federer had some early chances but could not take them and it
was Zverev who struck first when he broke to love to lead 5-3
before a couple of aces helped him pocket the opening set.
It was the first set Zverev, older brother of world number three
Alexander, had ever taken from Federer in six attempts, and a
shock looked on the cards when he had a break point in the
opening game of the second set.
Federer, who will be seeking a ninth Wimbledon title next month,
eventually found some magic with a backhand winner to break for
a 4-2 lead but the 36-year-old handed the advantage straight
back in the next game.
Veteran Tommy Haas stunned Federer in Stuttgart a year ago but
any thoughts of a similarly early exit against Zverev vanished
as he surged into a 4-1 lead in the second set and cruised to
victory.
"Three months is a long time, it's longer than the year-end
break," said Federer, who had not played since March.
"So I'm very happy returning on good terms onto the Tour. It's
difficult, missed some chances maybe in the first set... He
connected well at the right times. Then I found my rhythm. I'm
super happy to be back on Tour. It's been a great start."
Second seed Lucas Pouille also moved into the third round with a
straight sets win over German wildcard Rudolf Molleker but sixth
seed Denis Shapovalov was surprisingly beaten by 169th-ranked
Indian qualifier Prajnesh Gunneswaran.
Milos Raonic, the Wimbledon runner-up in 2016, eased into the
second round with victory over Mirza Basic.
(Reporting by Martyn Herman; Editing by Mark Heinrich)
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