Angry
Zverev bows out to clinical Canadian Raonic
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[January 21, 2019]
By Sudipto Ganguly
MELBOURNE (Reuters) - German prospect
Alexander Zverev only managed to beat his racket on Monday as the
highly-regarded fourth seed was dumped out of the Australian Open by
big-serving Canadian Milos Raonic in a surprisingly one-sided 6-1
6-1 7-6(5) fourth round triumph.
Zverev has emerged as one of the brightest stars in men's tennis
after victories over Roger Federer and Novak Djokovic en route to an
ATP Finals triumph in November, but the 21-year-old German remains
unable to find his best form at Grand Slams.
Following 20-year-old Greek Stefanos Tsitsipas' win over Federer on
Sunday, the towering, shaggy-haired Zverev needed to prove he also
has the temperament to match his talent and help lead the next
generation against the established order.
"This is one of many tournaments. You can't really compete every
single week saying you made semis there or quarters there, beat
that," Zverev, who has yet to progress beyond the quarter-finals at
a Grand Slam, told reporters.
"No, actually I want to be the best, but, yeah, not this week. Right
now I'm not happy, but I'm not depressed either. It's fine. It's a
tennis match. I have learned to take tennis matches as tennis
matches and not the end of the world."
Zverev started well against 16th seed Raonic with a break in the
first game, but he was then broken six times in the first two sets
before the Canadian converted his fourth match point in a tight
third set to seal the contest in less than two hours.
Injury-prone Raonic, who climbed to a career-high ranking of third
in 2016 when he reached the Wimbledon final, believes he was
rediscovering his best form.
"I had a really good off-season. I put in some of the best hours in
a long period of time, maybe if ever," the 28-year-old said. "I'm
not the kind of guy that needs a lot of matches.
FEELING BETTER
"For me, it's about being sharp, moving well, and being efficient
with my serve and this kind of thing.
"If I can get those kind of things, my serve always buys me time in
matches and in tournaments to sort of figure things out. It can keep
me alive for a while."
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Canada’s Milos Raonic celebrates winning his match against Germany's
Alexander Zverev. REUTERS/Lucy Nicholson
For the most part, Zverev was unable to figure anything out, and
after serving his fifth double-fault to cough up a break in the
second set, he hammered his racket repeatedly into the ground to
pick up a code violation warning from the umpire.
While the German did not go to the extent of smashing four rackets
into pieces as Marcos Baghdatis did during his three-set loss at
Melbourne Park to Stan Wawrinka in 2012, it did feel like a deja vu
moment for Zverev.
Last year, he took out his frustration in a similar manner during
his Australian Open third round loss to South Korean Chung Hyeon.
"It made me feel better," Zverev said, recalling the incident in
Monday's match when he smashed his racket nine times while also
startling a ball boy. "I was very angry, so I let my anger out."
Zverev put up a better fight in the third set behind an improved
serve and fewer unforced errors, as the German saved the second
match point he faced by winning a 29-shot rally but it ultimately
proved too little, too late.
Raonic advances to face either Croatian 11th seed Borna Coric or
Frenchman Lucas Pouille, who is seeded 28th, for a place in the
semi-finals.
(Reporting by Sudipto Ganguly; Editing by John O'Brien)
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