Raonic stays boring to knock out
Tsitsipas in straight sets
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[January 24, 2020]
MELBOURNE (Reuters) - Canadian
Milos Raonic served and volleyed with robotic precision to bundle
Greek sixth seed Stefanos Tsitsipas out of the Australian Open with
a 7-5 6-4 7-6(2) victory in the third round on Friday.
Raonic, who reached the last four at Melbourne Park in 2016 and the
Wimbledon final the same year, hit 19 aces and 55 winners and did
not give ATP Finals champion Tsitsipas a single breakpoint
opportunity in the match.
On a day that witnessed 23-time Grand Slam winner Serena Williams
and defending champion Naomi Osaka exit the women's draw, the men's
side also lost Spanish ninth seed Roberto Bautista Agut, who fell to
Marin Cilic after a marathon 6-7(3) 6-4 6-0 5-7 6-3 match.
Cilic, who won the 2014 U.S. Open and reached the final at Melbourne
Park in 2018, also had a five-set win in his previous round against
Frenchman Benoit Paire but the Croatian had no doubt he will fully
recover before facing Raonic.
Tsitsipas was broken once in each of the first and second sets
before Raonic claimed the tiebreak comfortably and sealed their
maiden meeting with a forehand crosscourt winner.
"I knew it was going to be important that I play well but I play
consistently well throughout the match," Raonic said. "I wasn't
having any fluctuations. I think that was how I was going to create
my opportunities, and it worked out well.
"I know I'm not necessarily easy to play, especially if I serve
well, if I do my things well, if I can find a way to move forward.
There are not many guys necessarily that play the way I do, and I
can find an efficiency in it."
Tsitsipas, who last year defeated Roger Federer on his way to the
last four, said it was "monotonic" and sometimes "boring" to take on
a big-server like Raonic.
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Canada's Milos Raonic in action during the match against Greece's
Stefanos Tsitsipas. REUTERS/Issei Kato
"He's playing forehands from all over the court, and you don't
really know where you should stand exactly, because he's just so
fast and just turning around, hitting those forehands," Tsitsipas
said. "Serve is great, one of the best in the game.
"I felt a bit stupid returning his serves. I felt like I was slow.
My anticipation was not there."
Melbourne's large Greek community was once again out in full force
at the Margaret Court Arena to support Tsitsipas but even their
constant chants of "Stefanos Tsitsipas, ole, ole, ole" was not
enough to lift the Athens-born player.
Play was held up briefly due to Greek fans singing just outside one
of the entry doors and the umpire had to repeatedly urge security
officials to close the door to allow Raonic to continue serving.
But Raonic maintained a Zen-like focus amid all the cacophony and
went about his job like a machine.
(Reporting by Sudipto Ganguly; editing by Toby Davis and Nick Macfie)
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