The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

2. Aces are wild for Isner

Verdasco, 33, hands Italian Open winner defeat in four sets.

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John Isner hit 31 aces and, more surprising­ly, converted all three of his break points in a 6-3, 4-6, 7-6 (5), 6-3 victory over Jordan Thompson of Australia to reach the second round at the French Open.

PARIS — On a day of upsets on Court Philippe Chatrier, up-and-coming youngster Alexander Zverev lost to Fernando Verdasco when their first-round match resumed at the French Open on Tuesday.

The match was suspended Monday because of darkness after the players split the first two sets. Ninthseede­d Zverev eventually fell 6-4, 3-6, 6-4, 6-2.

No. 7 seed Johanna Konta of Britain had earlier lost 1-6, 7-6 (2), 6-4 to 109th-ranked Hsieh Su-wei of Taiwan on the showcourt. Konta has now lost all three matches she’s played at the French Open in her career.

Verdasco, 33, pinpointed the third set as the turning point of his match.

“I think that that moment of winning the third set gave me a lot of confidence and a lot of air to play the fourth,” the Spaniard said. “And I think it was hard for him on the other side. Like, you know, to start again and have to win two more sets.”

Zverev was one of the outside favorites after impressing on his way to victory at the Italian Open earlier this month. But the 20-year-old German grew more frustrated as the match went on and broke his racket during the fourth set.

“You sometimes play bad. It’s just this is our sport,” Zverev said. “I mean, what can you do? In Rome I played fantastic, I won the tournament. Here I played bad, I lost first round. That’s the way it goes.”

Meanwhile, Juan Martin del Potro returned to Roland Garros for the first time in five years and the 2009 U.S. Open champion had little trouble picking up a victory.

After a series of wrist operations kept him off the tour for months at a time, Del Potro once again used his big forehand to great effect. He beat qualifier Guido Pella 6-2, 6-1, 6-4 in an all-Argentine matchup, showing no sign of the shoulder and back problems that hampered him at the Lyon Open last week and did not face a single break point.

Stan Wawrinka is also safely through to the second round after a 6-2, 7-6 (6), 6-3 win over Jozef Kovalik of Slovakia.

Wawrinka started his clay season poorly before emerging with a title at the Geneva Open last week. The No. 3 seed kept up his momentum in Paris.

“I enjoyed it very much,” said Wawrinka, who won at Roland Garros in 2015. “It was not necessaril­y easy after I played in Geneva until Saturday to get into gear. I’m feeling good, I’m playing good tennis and I’m happy to be back in Paris.”

Other winners included No. 18 Nick Kyrgios and No. 5 Elina Svitolina.

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 ?? CLIVE BRUNSKILL / GETTY IMAGES ?? Alexander Zverev breaks his racket in frustratio­n during an upset loss against Fernando Verdasco in a suspended first-round match.
CLIVE BRUNSKILL / GETTY IMAGES Alexander Zverev breaks his racket in frustratio­n during an upset loss against Fernando Verdasco in a suspended first-round match.

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