Stress-free Zverev cruises past
Verdasco into fourth round
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[January 25, 2020]
By Sudipto Ganguly
MELBOURNE (Reuters) - Seventh seed
Alexander Zverev credited a stress-free life off court for his
strong run at the Australian Open after marching into the fourth
round with a 6-2 6-2 6-4 win over Spanish veteran Fernando Verdasco
on Saturday.
Zverev arrived in Melbourne lacking confidence after losing all
three of his singles matches at the inaugural ATP Cup to Australia's
Alex de Minaur, Greek Stefanos Tsitsipas and Canada's Denis
Shapovalov.
His serve has always been one of his biggest weapons but it looked
in complete disarray as the German totaled 31 double-faults during
the three defeats.
But the 22-year-old has bounced back splendidly at the year's first
Grand Slam, where he has not lost a set as he advanced to the fourth
round for the second straight time.
"Generally I'm happy outside the court, happy on the court, happy in
life," he said. "Then I think you play your best.
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"When you have stress outside, when you have stress that I had last
year with all sorts of things, you're not going to perform your
best. I have a pretty calm life right now, which is nice for me."
Zverev was once considered one of the leading 'Next Gen' contenders
to break the Grand Slam hegemony of Novak Djokovic, Rafa Nadal and
Roger Federer who have shared the last 12 majors between them.
But the German, who beat Federer and Djokovic on his way to the 2018
ATP Finals title, fell off the radar as he failed to get past the
quarter-finals at the majors.
"It's so far been a good week for me... It has been getting better.
Today was the best match I think I've played so far," Zverev said.
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Germany's Alexander Zverev celebrates after his match against
Spain's Fernando Verdasco. REUTERS/Hannah Mckay
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He did have three double faults against Verdasco at the Margaret
Court Arena but also served 15 aces while hitting 34 winners in the
match.
Zverev broke the 36-year-old Verdasco, a former top-10 player who is
currently ranked 51, twice in each of the first two sets.
Verdasco refused to give up and broke his opponent in the third to
go up 4-2 but Zverev got the set back on serve in the next game and
then broke the Spaniard again in the ninth game before serving out
to complete his victory.
Zverev will meet Russian Andrey Rublev, who extended his winning
streak to 11-0 for the season with a 2-6 7-6(3) 6-4 7-6(4) win over
11th seed David Goffin earlier on Saturday, for a place in the
quarter-finals.
Zverev said he had been friends with Rublev since they were
10-year-olds.
"He's one of the most hard-hitting players on tour. Out of every
position, he can hit a winner," he said. "He's somebody that is very
young still but always is working and always is improving."
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(Reporting by Sudipto Ganguly; editing by Clare Fallon)
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