Townsville Bulletin

Thanasi a sore loser as Bolt breaks through

- LEO SCHLINK

IN an afternoon of extreme contrast, South Australian pair Alex Bolt and Thanasi Kokkinakis endured the highs and lows of grand slam battle.

Bolt, 26, exulted in his first grand slam main draw win, three years after opting out of tennis to work as a fence labourer.

The Murray Bridge lefthander’s 4-6, 6-3, 6-2, 6-2 triumph over former world No. 8 Jack Sock was balanced by the desolation of Kokkinakis’s injury-enforced retirement.

Kokkinakis succumbed to pectoral soreness with the score against Japan’s Taro Daniel 5-7, 6-4.

Watched by Davis Cup captain Lleyton Hewitt and coach Tony Roche, Bolt buzzed with elation after rolling Sock.

“It’s a pretty surreal feeling. I went over and gave my mum a bit of a hug, my dad was here, my brother flew over,” Bolt said.

“A couple of other friends from Murray Bridge flew over. It was really nice to play in front of them.”

Bolt out-served Sock with 22 aces to 13.

A gifted southpaw, Bolt previously failed to convert opportunit­ies at the highest level.

Improved self belief has played a critical role.

“I’m up there playing the best tennis I’ve played. And I still feel I can play better. So, good things are to come,” he said. Bolt joined countrymen Alex de Minaur, Jordan Thompson, John Millman and Matthew Ebden in the second round.

He will next face French 29th seed Gilles Simon.

Kokkinakis won the first set of the clash with Daniel 7-5 before calling a medical time-out early in the second set to receive treatment on his right shoulder.

The distraught baseliner struggled on for a few more games before submitting.

Kokkinakis’s injury bulletin is depressing.

The 22-year-old also suffered a cracked kneecap last April in a frustratin­g campaign in which he managed just nine tour matches for three wins.

But among those three victories was a win over Roger Federer at the World Tour Masters event in Miami – a tantalisin­g reminder of just what Kokkinakis was capable of when not let down by his fragile body.

• A frustrated Daria Gavrilova is searching for a magic solution to her form slump.

The Australian was visibly irritated throughout her straight sets 7-5, 6-3 loss to Tamara Zidansek, gesturing and shouting to her support team. Gavrilova was ranked as high as No.20 in the world in 2017 but has since slipped to No.41 and lost in the first round at both the Brisbane and Sydney internatio­nals in the lead up to the Australian Open.

“If I knew, if there was some magic to it, I’d probably use it, a magic pill,” Gavrilova said.

“Sometimes what helps me is when I just get in the zone. Doesn’t matter what you do, just play tough every point. When you’re negative, it’s pretty hard to get in that zone.”

 ??  ?? Alex Bolt after his win.
Alex Bolt after his win.
 ??  ?? Thanasi Kokkinakis grimaces in pain before his retirement.
Thanasi Kokkinakis grimaces in pain before his retirement.

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