The Star Malaysia

Paire falls short but Nishikori faces another French test

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FIERY Benoit Paire toyed with and teased the emotions of his fellow Frenchmen for a smidgen shy of three hours, before bowing out of his home Grand Slam in the second round.

Beaten 6-3, 2-6, 4-6, 6-2, 6-3 by Japan’s Kei Nishikori – a former US Open runner-up and 19th seed in Paris – the 29-year-old showed flashes of brilliance and, at two sets to one up, large sections of the crowd had started to believe.

It was a typically flamboyant performanc­e from Paire who, with his bushy black beard and dyed white hair, cuts quite a figure on the Roland Garros clay.

But despite all the drop shots, the pummelled backhands and the animated pleas to the crowd for sup- port, it proved not to be enough.

The expected stormcloud­s stayed away but the crowd was denied what it yearned for: a French victor in this most French of arenas.

Nishikori’s compact, safety-first game was met with mute indifferen­ce by the otherwise boisterous supporters who roared their approval and leapt up from their seats every time Paire struck a blow.

The French tennis crowd have always been enthusiast­ic embracers of the “Mexican Wave” and time and time again it swirled through the stands as Paire’s supporters willed their man to win.

Nishikori, though – as quiet as Paire is animated, as careful as Paire is hit-and-miss – refused to be diverted from him mission.

Nishikori next faces another Frenchman Gilles Simon – and patriotic crowd – after Simon beat 12th seed Sam Querrey. If the Japanese baseliner is to go deep in this tournament, he will have to do it the hard way. — AFP

 ??  ?? Going all out: Japan’s Kei Nishikori returning a shot against France’s Benoit Paire during their second-round match on Wednesday. — AP
Going all out: Japan’s Kei Nishikori returning a shot against France’s Benoit Paire during their second-round match on Wednesday. — AP

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