Lethbridge Herald

Tsonga survives marathon

TENNIS VETERAN OUTLASTS CANADIAN TEEN AT AUSSIE OPEN

- Dennis Passa

In a match between shotmakers new and old, this time the young kid was ultimately given a tennis lesson by the flashy veteran.

Jo-Wilfried Tsonga casually hit a between-the-legs shot that kept him in a winning point, lunged with one of his patented stretch forehands for a winner, and generally provided the Margaret Court Arena crowd with three hours, 37 minutes of premium entertainm­ent at the Australian Open on Wednesday.

On the losing end was Denis Shapovalov, an 18-year-old Canadian who led 5-2 in the fifth set before losing his secondroun­d match 3-6, 6-3, 1-6, 7-6 (4), 7-5 to the 32-year-old Frenchman who has a 10-minute YouTube video chroniclin­g his “Most Amazing Moments.”

A few new shots may have to be added to the clip after Wednesday’s match.

“The most important thing for me was to fight, give my best on court until the last point,” Tsonga said. “That’s what I did today. I think he deserved to win also ... but I was also courageous and I did my job at the end. “

The athletic Shapovalov, often compared with a younger Tsonga, had a few great moments of his own, including a shot around the net from the baseline for a winner.

“There’s always nerves in a tennis match,” Shapovalov said of the blown fifth-set lead. “I wasn’t thinking about it much. Just didn’t play a good game on my serve. Then he picked up his level. I’m just going to learn from it and keep going.”

Shapovalov netted the return of that “tweener” by Tsonga.

“It was a great get,” Shapovalov said. “It was an unbelievab­le shot, don’t get me wrong. I don’t think it threw me off.”

The result helped avenge the only time the players had met previously, at last year’s U.S. Open, when Shapovalov won in straight sets.

“For me, I think it was an advantage to play him for the second time because I knew he was able to do things, crazy things like he did today,” Tsonga said.

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