Top-seeded David Ferrer started the new season with a dropped first set
here on Tuesday to Dustin Brown, a qualifier outside the world’s top
150, and a damaged court that opened like a crater on the moon. Repairs
appeared to involve tape and glue on a tear about five feet behind the
baseline where Ferrer’s heel had ripped into the surface. There
was also an anxious-looking conference and a ball-boys’ impromptu
Gangnam-style dance session on the playing area during a delay that
lasted more than an hour.
It was eventually two and a half hours
before the world number five from Spain survived his first round in the
Qatar Open by 5-7, 6-3, 6-2 against Brown who is a tall, Jamaica-based
German nicknamed “Dreddy,” with impressive locks flying down to the
small of his back. “None of it was easy,” said Ferrer, which was
an understatement. Brown was unusual for his aggressive serving, eager
forward movement, and willingness to volley, and other circumstances
must have seemed to Ferrer bizarrely familiar.
Two years ago he
and Andy Roddick were forced off their court at the US Open by a crack
near the baseline that let the water through, and required them to
change courts, and last year at New York a tornado forced Ferrer and
Novak Djokovic to interrupt their semifinal by an entire day. Roddick
tweeted a solution for Doha, suggesting they should “move Ferrer to
court 13” — the court number where the American completed his 2011 US
Open win over the Spaniard. Ferrer chortled his laughter when he heard.
Later
Ferrer commented on the oddities that had afflicted him in the last two
years by saying: “Yeah — so many things, yeah. Too many things.” Asked if something were following him around, he said: “Something, yes — it’s bad luck. I don’t even know why.” This
time Ferrer had a more fortunate resumption. Though a set down he broke
Brown’s serve at once, and consolidated that advantage right through
the second set. He then made another crucial break at the start of the third set, by which time the favorite was accelerating toward safety.
The
seedings say Ferrer should play a final on Saturday with Richard
Gasquet, the world number 10 from France, whose fluency appeared only
intermittently during a 6-3, 6-4 win over Jan Hernych, a 33-year-old
Czech qualifier. Hernych struck his ground strokes more often
inside the baseline than Gasquet — often a sign of potential dominance —
but missed with three of his four break point chances. Gasquet’s
confidence improved markedly after breaking serve at the start of the
second set and never looked like being pegged back, dropping only five
points in his next five service games.
He could have a semifinal
with his compatriot Gael Monfils, last year’s runner-up, whose first
match in two and a half months was a comfortable reintroduction, a 6-0,
6-3 win over the local wild card player, Mousa Shanan Zayed. However, Monfils’ next encounter is a potentially tough one, against Philipp Kohlschreiber, the third-seeded German. He
may also be mindful of the fate of another Frenchman, Jeremy Chardy,
the fifth seed but a 6-4, 6-4 loser to a German qualifier, Daniel
Brands.
Agence France-Presse
Agence France-Presse
source : the jakarta globe

0 comments:
Post a Comment