Zverev cruises past Bolt to reach fourth round
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[January 19, 2019]
By Jonathan Barrett
MELBOURNE (Reuters) - Germany's
Alexander Zverev brandished his credentials as an Australian Open
title contender by dispatching local wildcard Alex Bolt 6-3 6-3 6-2
in the third round on Saturday.
The fourth seed was tested early on his serve, which was initially
off-target, but was able to maintain control of the contest with a
strong returning display.
"There's always things to improve, but I think I played a good match
today," said Zverev, who will play big-serving Canadian Milos Raonic
in the fourth round.
After losing his serve once in the first set - and breaking three
times - Zverev filled in any holes that could be exploited and
picked up his first serve percentage to ease the pressure.
He started to hold serve more comfortably and deftly handled the
left-handed sliding serves delivered from the other end.
Bolt's forehand constantly switched between being an asset and a
liability, with the stylish left-handed swing prone to both
screaming winners and over-hitting that opened up break
opportunities the German gladly accepted.
"It's sort of a blessing and a curse sometimes," said Bolt. "I may
have all this power, but sometimes the control isn't always there.
Sometimes what I struggle with is finding that balance between going
for too much and not going for enough."
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Australia’s Alex Bolt in action during the match against Germany’s
Alexander Zverev. REUTERS/Edgar Su
Zverev promptly served out the match and muted his celebrations,
aware that he had just outclassed a local favorite who had won over
the crowd.
The result ended the uplifting run of the 26-year-old Australian who
was digging ditches on building sites just three years ago during a
career crisis of confidence.
Bolt entered the Australian Open without having previously won a
match in a Grand Slam, but showed he belonged in the majors with two
victories, which included a win over seasoned Frenchman Gilles
Simon.
(Reporting by Jonathan Barrett, editing by Nick Mulvenney and Ken
Ferris)
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