Tuesday, 25 June 2013

TENNIS: Wimbledon - Nadal suffers shock first-round loss to Darcis

Former Wimbledon champion Rafael Nadal has suffered a shock first-round exit to unfancied Belgian Steve Darcis at the All England Club.

A year after losing to Czech Lukas Rosol in the second round, Nadal was outplayed by the 135th-ranked Darcis on Court One, losing 7-6(4) 7-6(8) 6-4 in front of a disbelieving crowd.
Fifth seed Nadal, who had never lost in the first round of a grand-slam tournament before, appeared to be struggling physically at times but refused to make excuses.
"I tried my best out there in every moment. It was not possible for me," Nadal, playing on grass for the first time this season, told a news conference. "It is not a tragedy."
Nadal, who spent seven months out of action with a knee injury after last year's Wimbledon defeat, served for the second set but Darcis hit back to move two sets in front.
Asked if his knee had been giving him problems, Nadal said: "I don't want to talk about my knee this afternoon. Anything that I would say today about my knee would be an excuse. The only thing I can say is to congratulate Steve Darcis."
As the clock crept towards three hours on court, Nadal's touch deserted him completely and he turned his back on the court, grimacing, after failing to cash in a breakpoint in the eighth game and hitting a feeble forehand into the net.
As he served for the match at 5-4, Darcis, sensing blood, put himself ahead with a superb running forehand after chasing the ball across court. Finding himself right in front of the press photographers, he obligingly pumped his fist and roared with delight.
Another Nadal forehand error gave Darcis matchpoint and he finished off the biggest win of his career with an ace.
"You don't beat Nadal if he isn't playing his best tennis," said Darcis, a no-nonsense player who trudged out from every changeover with his towel clenched between his teeth and his head bowed in thought.
"It is my biggest win so I have to be happy. Maybe he was not in the best shape ever but I have to be proud of me," he told a news conference.
The man nicknamed "The Shark", after a tattoo he sports on his right shoulder, dropped 22 places in the rankings coming into Wimbledon and said his career had often been blighted by injury.
"I have been feeling really good for a few months," he added. "For me it was easy today, nobody expected me to win. I really wanted to do something today."
Darcis, who faces Lukasz Kubot of Poland in the next round, was the lowest-ranked player to beat Nadal for seven years, since Joachim Johansson, the world number 690, in Stockholm.
The 27-year-old Spaniard became the first reigning French Open champion to lose in the first round of Wimbledon since Brazil's Gustavo Kuerten suffered the same fate in 1997.

 

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