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Andy Roddick's win a real feat on clay

TENNIS / FRENCH OPEN FYI

The sixth-ranked American rolls to a straight-sets victory over a French qualifier to reach the French Open's second round for first time since 2005.

May 26, 2009|Chuck Culpepper

PARIS — The winners on Monday included No. 1 Dinara Safina in two bagel sets, No. 3 Venus Williams in three tough ones, No. 1 Rafael Nadal and No. 2 Roger Federer in six straight sets on the main Court Philippe Chatrier and, for fun, some American guy named Roddick over on some haunted-house court.

This pup Roddick, seldom seen for more than cameos at French Opens, made some brows furrow.


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Apparently, though, he turned out to be Andy Roddick, newly married, newly coached by Larry Stefanki and newly into a French Open second round for the first time since 2005.

"I'm just glad I finally won a match out there," Roddick said of Court Suzanne Lenglen, the site of both his past clay horrors and his 6-2, 6-4, 6-2 success Monday against the 305th-ranked French wild-card entry Romain Jouan.

While bemoaning that he often reads and hears about Americans flopping on clay but never reads and hears about European clay-court specialists flopping on other courts -- hint: those discussions may occur in foreign languages -- the world's No. 6 player expertly explained the clay issues that have meant just one third round in seven previous French tries.

Clay "makes my serve a little bit more neutral," Roddick said. "Puts me from a pretty good mover for my size to an average mover. My backhand, the trajectory is a little bit flatter. Those are all things that have to be dealt with on a point-to-point basis. You're trying to manage your way through that."

Even with such snags, though, here was a case where the winner felt elated to get through and the loser felt elated to take the court with the winner. While Roddick struggled to find useful information on Jouan, 23, Jouan worried about spending the first Grand Slam match of his life looking "ridiculous."

He didn't, much to his relief, and said of Roddick, "He told my father in the locker room that I was a good player. That was nice. I think it's very nice of him. I'm not sure he really believes that, but it was nice."

Today's featured matches

World rankings in parentheses.

Serena Williams (2) vs. Klara Zakopalova (100), Czech Republic: The records show that Williams hasn't been to a final here in seven years or to a semifinal in six. Even given the clay and everything, don't some statistics just look erroneous?

James Blake (16) vs. Leonardo Mayer (93), Argentina: If Blake loses, he might repeat his tiresomely cliched 2008 refrain about people criticizing American players without having played in French Opens themselves. Oh please, just let him win.

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