Nadal, Swiatek win on day one of Open

Taipei Times
 
Nadal, Swiatek win on day one of Open

YOUNG GUNS:American teen Coco Gauff beat Katerina Siniakova to set up a highly anticipated showdown with 20-year-old former US Open champion Emma Raducanu

Rafael Nadal yesterday launched his Australian Open title defense with a four-set victory over Britain’s Jack Draper, as home hope Nick Kyrgios quit through injury without hitting a ball.

In the women’s draw, top seed Iga Swiatek survived a tough examination while Jessica Pegula and teenage prodigy Coco Gauff were both emphatic winners on the first day of action.

Spanish great Nadal, 36, had been in poor form by his sky-high standards, losing six of his past seven matches stretching back to defeat in the last 16 at the US Open.

In fast-rising Draper, 21, the 22-time Grand Slam champion faced a stern test to start his campaign at a sweltering Melbourne Park.

Top seed Nadal recovered from a second-set wobble — and a bizarre incident when a ball boy accidentally took his racket — to defeat the 38th-ranked Briton 7-5, 2-6, 6-4, 6-1 at Rod Laver Arena.

Nadal, who recently became a father, faces American Mackenzie McDonald in round two.

“Very exciting, new beginning, just super-happy to be back at Rod Laver with a victory I needed,” he said after grinding down Draper. “Last couple of months have not been easy for me.”

Nadal was on court when Australia’s talented, but temperamental Kyrgios called a hastily arranged a news conference and announced that he was out of the tournament with a knee injury.

“I’m devastated, obviously,” said the Wimbledon finalist, who was considered an outside bet to win a maiden Grand Slam crown.

“I’ve had some great tournaments here, winning the doubles last year and playing the tennis of my life probably going into this event,” he said. “I’m just exhausted from everything, and [it’s] obviously pretty brutal.”

Other winners yesterday included third seed Stefanos Tsitsipas, 10th seed Hubert Hurkacz and 11th seed Cameron Norrie, on a day of few shocks.

Sixth seed Felix Auger-Aliassime saw off dogged Vasek Pospisil in an all-Canadian clash, but 21st seed Borna Coric fell to Czech player Jiri Lehecka in straight sets.

In the women’s draw, hot favorite Swiatek was far from her fluent best against Jule Niemeier, but got the job done, 6-4, 7-5.

“Honestly, I wanted to be focused on myself because I know that Jule serves amazing and was really pushing, putting pressure on me,” said Swiatek, who landed only 49 percent of her first serves. “So I’m pretty happy that I got through this match because the first round is always tricky, and I guess an opponent like Jule makes it even more tricky.”

The Pole, who is chasing an Australian Open crown to go with major titles at the US Open and Roland Garros, next plays Camila Osorio of Colombia.

In-form Pegula blitzed 161st-ranked Romanian Jaqueline Cristian 6-0, 6-1 in a 59-minute romp to signal her intent.

Fellow American Gauff was equally explosive in racing into the second round with a 6-1, 6-4 thumping of Czech Katerina Siniakova.

The 18-year-old Gauff faces a mouthwatering encounter against former US Open champion Emma Raducanu.

It would be the first-ever meeting between Gauff and the 20-year-old Raducanu, two rising stars of women’s tennis.

“I’m really looking forward to this match,” Raducanu said.

“I’m very up for it. Coco has obviously done a lot of great things and she’s playing well,” she said. “I think we’re both good, young players, we’re both coming through — part of the next generation of tennis really — it’s going to be a great match.”

Also safely through was Danielle Collins of the US, last year’s beaten finalist in Melbourne. Greek sixth seed Maria Sakkari also won and Victoria Azarenka defeated Sofia Kenin in a battle of two former Australian Open champions.

Comments will be moderated. Keep comments relevant to the article. Remarks containing abusive and obscene language, personal attacks of any kind or promotion will be removed and the user banned. Final decision will be at the discretion of the Taipei Times.