Orlando Sentinel

Johnson guts out emotional victory

- By Howard Fendrich

PARIS — Steve Johnson held everything in, all of it, until he simply could not any longer.

Still mourning the recent death of his father, a tennis coach who helped Johnson learn the game back home in California, the 25thseeded American didn’t allow the jumble of feelings to show outwardly. He didn’t permit them to affect his ability to smack a tennis ball, either, and he managed to edge Borna Coric 6-2, 7-6 (8), 3-6, 7-6 (6) and reach the French Open’s third round.

For nearly 4 hours Wednesday, Johnson stayed the course, over and over, even as the on-court particular­s grew complicate­d. He managed to be OK even after his initial four match points slipped away. And even when he was docked a point by the chair umpire for what an incredulou­s Johnson considered an innocuous extra hit of the ball deep in the fourth set. And yet again when Coric twice was a single point from forcing a fifth set.

Only when, on his fifth chance to end things, Johnson delivered a clean forehand winner to seal the victory, did he let go, dropping onto to his knees near the baseline, his chest heaving, his eyes filling with tears.

“I have no idea what happened after I hit the forehand. I just kind of collapsed and, emotionall­y, it got the best of me,” said Johnson, who faces No. 6 Dominic Thiem next.

Coric said afterward he knew about the personal difficulty his foe was dealing with.

“Super tough, definitely,” the 40th-ranked Croatian said.

After they shook hands, Johnson leaned his head on his arm atop the net, sobbing.

Steve Johnson Sr. passed away three weeks ago.

“He raised me to be a competitor and a fighter to the last point. And that’s what I try to do with my tennis,” said the 27-year-old Johnson, who won two NCAA singles titles and four team titles at Southern California. “I may not be the best tennis player. But there’s not going to be a day where I’m just going to let you win.”

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