Toronto Star

Raonic and Isner rarely give anyone a break

- THE CANADIAN PRESS

Don’t be surprised if there’s a tiebreaker or two when Thornhill’s Milos Raonic squares off with American John Isner in the fourth round of the U.S. Open.

All five of the previous matches between two of the hardest servers in men’s tennis have had at least one tiebreaker, with both players among the leaders when it comes to avoiding breaks.

It’s a rematch of a Wimbledon quarterfin­al, won in four sets (the players split two tiebreaker­s) by Isner, the 11th seed at the U.S. Open. Raonic comes into Sunday’s match as the No. 25 seed.

“(Raonic) seems to be playing very well, I think back to his level of a few years past,” the 33-year-old Isner said after a four-set win against Dusan Lajovic of Serbia on Friday. “I mean, I have the utmost respect for him. I think he’s an excellent player, he’s proved that his whole career.

“It will be a tough match certainly. We’ve played a handful of times. Matches between us are inherently close, as you can imagine. But we’ll see what happens.”

Isner, coming off a career-best Grand Slam (semifinals at Wimbledon), has the 4-1 lead over Raonic in head-to-head competitio­n. Nine of their 13 sets have ended in tiebreaks.

Over the past 52 weeks, the six-foot-10 Isner leads the ATP Tour in service games won (94.2 per cent). The six-footfive Raonic is fourth at 90.4 per cent.

On the other hand, Raonic is 70th in return games won, while Isner is 88th.

“I think we’re both quite aware of what the other guy wants to do,” the 27-year-old Raonic said after his straightse­ts triumph over 2016 U.S. Open champ Stan Wawrinka of Switzerlan­d on Friday night.

“We’re both aware that opportunit­ies are not going to be that often arising. It’s going to be important to be discipline­d and to make sure you sort of are always getting there, giving yourself some kind of situations, that you’re discipline­d and sharp with yourself when those situations arise.”

Raonic is coming off a run to the quarterfin­als at an ATP Masters 1000 event in Cincinnati. He has never reached the quarterfin­als at the U.S. Open, which he can do with one more win. He was eliminated in the round of 16 in three straight years from 2012-14.

Isner, meanwhile, is awaiting the birth of his first child. His wife, Madison, is expecting to have a baby this month. It’s possible he might have to leave the U.S. Open on short notice.

“I’m not going to miss the birth, but we’ll see,” said Isner, whose best U.S. Open showing was a quarterfin­als run in 2011.

Raonic is the lone Canadian left in the singles draw after Denis Shapovalov of Richmond Hill lost in five sets to Kevin Anderson on Friday.

In doubles, Ottawa native Gabriela Dabrowski lost twice on Saturday. Dabrowski and Yifan Xu lost 6-2, 7-6 (2) to unseeded Samantha Stosur and Shuai Zhang in the second round of women's doubles. A few hours later, Dabrowski and partner Mate Pavic lost 7-5, 6-3 to Christina McHale and Christian Harrison in mixed doubles.

 ??  ?? Milos Raonic and John Isner, two of tennis’ hardest servers, play Sunday at the U.S. Open.
Milos Raonic and John Isner, two of tennis’ hardest servers, play Sunday at the U.S. Open.
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