The Daily Courier

Canadians Bouchard, Shapovalov lose 2nd-round matches

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LONDON (CP) — Eugenie Bouchard’s four-match winning streak is over — and so is the Canadian’s run at Wimbledon.

The 24-year-old native of Westmount, Que., dropped a 6-4, 7-5 decision to No. 17 seed Ashleigh Barty of Australia in the second round of the grass-court major on Thursday.

Bouchard, who won three qualifying matches to get into the main draw after seeing her ranking tumble to No. 188, led 5-2 in the second set against Barty and had one set point, but couldn’t pull it off.

“It was a couple tough games. I wish maybe at 5-3 I just took a little bit more time and focused on my serve to maybe try and put some better first serves in,” Bouchard said. “But I was trying to be aggressive and she came up with some good shots, some tricky shots, and that was to be expected as well.”

Later in the day, No. 26 seed Denis Shapovalov of Richmond Hill, Ont., was eliminated after dropping a 0-6, 6-2, 6-4, 7-6 (3) decision to Benoit Paire of France in second-round play.

Shapovalov also missed on a crucial set point that would have given him the fourth set and tied the match. But Paire got out of trouble with a perfect lob to the baseline, and went on to win the set, and the match, in a tiebreaker.

“I had all the momentum after the first set and I blew that,” Shapovalov said, “and after that, he played really well and I wasn’t able to play well.

“I just have to look over the match again and do some brainstorm­ing, find out why this keeps happening,” he added. “It was kind of the same story at the French Open. I had a lot of momentum going my way and all of a sudden it just slipped away from me.”

The results left No. 13 seed Milos Raonic of Thornhill, Ont., as the lone Canadian left in singles play.

Raonic is scheduled to face Dennis Novak of Austria in the third round today.

Bouchard converted on just one of her six break-point opportunit­ies, while Barty was good on three of seven.

“I think I played an opponent who is playing really well right now, especially on this surface,” Bouchard said. “I think she has a great game for grass. I knew I was coming up against something tough. I’m disappoint­ed because I felt like I had chances in both sets and I think played well, but I know I can play better.”

The match featured two previous winners of the Wimbledon girls’ title — Barty claimed the crown in 2011, a feat matched by Bouchard a year later.

Bouchard went on to reach the Wimbledon women’s final in 2014, while Barty hadn’t won a match in the main draw until this year.

Meanwhile, Vernon’s Vasek Pospisil and American partner Ryan Harrison lost 6-4, 7-6 (8), 6-2 against the German duo of Philipp Petzschner and Tim Puetz in doubles.

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Bouchard
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Shapovalov

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