Evening Telegraph (First Edition)

Shock as Tsonga is beaten in first round

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Tsonga (pictured) was on the ropes against world No 91 Renzo Olivo when play was finally stopped at 9.55pm on Tuesday night.

Tsonga had just broken back to trail 5-4 in the fourth set and by two sets to one, meaning he immediatel­y had to serve to stay in the match when it resumed yesterday.

However, he lasted just one game, albeit a dramatic one. After pulling back from 40-0 to huge cheers from the crowd on Court Philippe Chatrier, Tsonga missed a chance to level at 5-5 before Olivo took his fourth match point to win 7-5 6-4 6-7 (6/8) 6-4.

It was the biggest shock of the men’s draw so far, and a disappoint­ment to both Tsonga, 32, and the French public, as he had arrived in Paris on the back of his first claycourt title in Lyon.

Tsonga was keen to keep things in perspectiv­e, saying: “I’m not a beginner. I have been playing tennis for a number of years.

“Tennis runs in cycles. There are victories. There are disappoint­ments. Last week I won my first ever clay tournament. And today I lost at the French Open. It’s the paradox of tennis.

“What I’m interested in is the future, and I hope I’ll play better in the next tournament­s and pick up a couple of trophies, because there is still a lot to be done out there.”

Olivo, playing in his first French Open, meets Britain’s Kyle Edmund in round two.

Djokovic and Nadal posted identical scorelines, with the defending champion seeing off Joao Sousa 6-1 6-4 6-3 before Nadal defeated Robin Haase.

Title favourite Nadal was the more impressive of the two, hitting 33 winners and denying Dutchman Haase a single break point.

“I think I played a good match,” said the fourth seed. “I’m hitting very well with the forehand. I think my serve worked better than two days ago.

“I was more or less in control during the whole match, so I’m very happy.”

Djokovic felt he improved from his win over Marcel Granollers, although he allowed Sousa into the match in the second set and might have trailed 4-2 in the third.

“In some important moments I was kind of hanging in there,” said Djokovic. “Especially in the third set, he missed an easy forehand to go a break up in the third. It was quite close.

“The way I ended the match and the l ast couple of games were positive. The way I started, as well. I felt better than the first round.”

Steve Johnson put grief aside to defeat Borna Coric 6-2 7-6 (10/8) 3-6 7-6 (8/6). He was tearful as he spoke about the recent death of his father.

NOVAK Djokovic and Rafael Nadal reached the French Open third round but Jo-Wilfried Tsonga’s late-night heroics proved in vain as he suffered his first opening-round loss at a grand slam in a decade.

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