China Daily

Kerber finds it tough at the top

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LONDON — There are few things in tennis more embarrassi­ng than being beaten in the first round of a Grand Slam tournament while ranked No 1 in the world.

For Angelique Kerber, it’s a fresh memory after being bounced at the French Open just five weeks ago.

Only two women at Wimbledon in the profession­al era — Steffi Graf in 1994 and Martina Hingis in 1999 and 2001 — have duplicated that dubious feat.

But such has been the woeful form of Kerber, many pundits feared she might be heading for a Paris-London first-round exit double on Tuesday — a day when she had been handed the honor of opening Centre Court proceeding­s in the absence of title holder Serena Williams.

But Kerber proved the naysayers wrong with her 6-4, 6-4 win over American qualifier Irina Falconi.

However, the manner of her win against an opponent who had never won a match at Wimbledon in four previous visits and is ranked 247th, did little to quell the belief that Kerber is unlikely to repeat her spectacula­r 2016 run when she finished runner-up to Williams, who is taking a hiatus from playing during her pregnancy.

“Playing first rounds in Grand Slams are always tough, especially with (the memory of) my first-round match that I lost in Paris,” Kerber said after registerin­g her first win at a Grand Slam tournament since bowing out in the fourth round of the Australian Open in January.

“I was actually just thinking about point-by-point, trying to finding my rhythm during the whole match,” added the German, who produced 13 unforced errors and only eight winners in a below-par opening set against Falconi.

A season after being the toast of the tennis world by winning two Grand Slam titles and finishing runner up to Williams at the All England Club, the 29-year-old admitted that life at the top has not been an easy ride.

“There is much more expectatio­n, much more pressure, from me, from outside, from everything,” said Kerber, whose No 1 ranking is on the line at Wimbledon.

“It’s easier to go there than to stay there.”

Such have been Kerber’s trials and tribulatio­ns this year — reaching only one final compared with a WTA tourleadin­g eight in 2016 — that one false move here and the chasing duo of Karolina Pliskova or Simona Halep could unseat her from the top spot.

 ?? ALASTAIR GRANT / AP ?? Angelique Kerber stretches for a return en route to her 6-4, 6-4 win over Irina Falconi on Tuesday.
ALASTAIR GRANT / AP Angelique Kerber stretches for a return en route to her 6-4, 6-4 win over Irina Falconi on Tuesday.

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