The Scotsman

Thiem considers Challenger Tour after first-round exit

- By ANDY SIMS

Dominic Thiem looked a shadow of the player who once appeared destined to eventually rule at Roland Garros as he bowed out in straight sets in the first round of the French Open.

The former world number three, a finalist here in 2018 and 2019 when he was the latest heir apparent to serial winner Rafael Nadal, has yet to win a match since returning from the wrist injury which ended his season last year. Thiem, easily beaten 6-3 6-2 6-4 by the unheralded Hugo Dellien of Bolivia, admits he may now consider dropping down to the secondtier Challenger Tour in a bid to rediscover how to win.

“It was not a good match at all, but it is what it is,” said the 28-year-old Austrian. “I knew that it was going to take time, that the level is extremely high from all the players competing here and I’m not there yet. I was really working hard to get there but the time was just not enough. “I’m definitely thinking to go back to Challenger level now for maybe one or two tournament­s. Of course a match win would help a lot but I was, in all the matches I played, still pretty far away from a win.”

The current king of clay in-waiting, teenage sensation Carlos Alcaraz, raced into the second round showing glimpses of why he is so highly-regarded. The 19-year-old Spaniard swept past Juan Ignacio Londero of Argentina 6-4 6-2 6-0. Zverev, the German world number three and highest ranked player competing yesterday , booked his place in round two with a 6-2 6-4 6-4 victory over Austrian Sebastian Ofner. Ninth seed Felix Auger-aliassime, of Canada, beat Peruvian qualifier Juan Pablo Varillas 2-6 2-6 6-1 6-3 6-3.

 ?? ?? 0 Dominic Thiem congratula­tes Hugo Dellien after the match
0 Dominic Thiem congratula­tes Hugo Dellien after the match

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