Coventry Telegraph

Roger and out... but Dan serves up timely reminder

- By ELEANOR CROOKS Katie Boulter put up a good fight Dan Evans Dan Evans reacts during his defeat to Roger Federer

DAN Evans gave himself and everyone else a reminder of his talents by pushing Roger Federer on Rod Laver Arena in the second round of the Australian Open.

The 28-year-old from Birmingham reached his career high two years ago by defeating Marin Cilic in Melbourne to make the fourth round before the self-inflicted exile of a cocaine ban left him having to start again.

He has worked his way back to 189 in the rankings in less than a year and should return quickly to the top 100 if he can maintain the form he showed here in a 7-6 (5) 7-6 (3) 6-3 defeat to the two-time defending champion.

The person Evans most needed to convince may well have been himself. He admitted afterwards he has struggled to motivate himself at the smaller tournament­s he has needed to play, with the nadir coming at the beginning of this month when he lost in the second round of a Challenger in Playford.

He said: “I think I needed a good result in a bigger tournament to give me some confidence to go back to that and do some damage in those tournament­s, rather than thinking I’m better than them but not really have any form to say I am.

“I practised with Andy (Murray) last week on Rod Laver and I said to (coach) Dave (Felgate), ‘if we’re playing here next week or the week after, something good’s happened.’

“I ended up playing Roger on there. It’s funny because I was in a terrible place after Playford. I was doubting myself.”

The main frustratio­n about Evans has been his talent has never been in

I think I needed a good result in a bigger tournament to give me some confidence to go back to that and do some damage.

doubt. Blessed with a delicate touch, high tennis IQ, fine athletic abilities and a strong serve for a man of 5ft 9in, he is a player for the purists, and he earned the ultimate accolade when Federer said afterwards: “It feels like playing a mirror a little bit.”

In typically self-deprecatin­g fashion, Evans said: “I think he meant in game style rather than level. It was a good match. There are similariti­es but he does a lot of things better than me.”

Federer backed Evans to climb back up the rankings, saying: “I have high regard for Dan. I think he’s a good player. I think he can be top 50 again, no problem.”

Katie Boulter also put in a creditable performanc­e against a high-level opponent, going down 6-3 6-4 to 11th seed Aryna Sabalenka, who has been hotly tipped as a grand slam winner very soon.

Boulter, 22, who was trying to back up her impressive victory over Ekaterina Makarova in round one, said: “I’m a little bit disappoint­ed.

“I thought I stuck with her pretty well. It’s quite encouragin­g for me to play someone like that and not play my best tennis and still be in there with a chance to win a set or two.”

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