The Day

Zverev advances at French Open

- By HOWARD FENDRICH AP Tennis Writer

Paris — Talented and peggedfor-success as Alexander Zverev might be, there he was in the French Open's main stadium Friday, on the precipice of a third-round defeat and yet another Grand Slam disappoint­ment.

A loss would have left the No. 2-seeded Zverev with an 0-8 record at major tournament­s against men ranked in the top 50. A loss also would have left his resume still with merely one trip as far as the round of 16 at any Slam — and zero such runs at Roland Garros.

In the fourth set, his opponent served for the victory. In the fifth, the circumstan­ces were more dire: Zverev faced a match point. Both times, he proved steadier and sturdier than Damir Dzumhur, a Bosnian ranked 29th and seeded 26th, and Zverev eventually prevailed 6-2, 3-6, 4-6, 7-6 (3), 7-5 in 3 hours, 54 minutes.

It gave the 21-year-old German his second consecutiv­e five-set win; he trailed two sets to one in each. It also showed — not just to others but, perhaps more importantl­y, to Zverev himself — that he can handle such occasions, that he is capable of doing what's necessary when the sets and hours add up, and that he is perhaps finally ready to stride into the very last days at a major. He's the only active player outside of the "Big 4" of Roger Federer, Rafael Nadal, Novak Djokovic and Andy Murray with three Masters titles. But Grand Slam success has been elusive.

As for what sort of internal strife was happening in Zverev's head Friday?

"None," Zverev said. "Mainly, I was thinking (about) what I was going to have for lunch." Well, then. He acknowledg­ed drawing a dose of confidence from managing to win two five-setters in a row, "knowing that I'm fit enough to last as long as I want."

In contrast, No. 4 Grigor Dimitrov was unable to pull off back-to-back five-set wins.

The two-time major semifinali­st fell to 0-7 against top-50 foes at the French Open with a 7-6 (4), 6-2, 6-4 loss to 35th-ranked Fernando Verdasco.

"I lost my nerves early on," Dimitrov said. "He played an absolutely stunning match. What can I say?"

Verdasco's seventh career fourthroun­d match at Roland Garros — he's never won one — will come against 2016 champion Djokovic, who seemed to come alive after obliterati­ng his racket in the second-set tiebreaker and wound up eliminatin­g No. 13 Roberto Bautista-Agut 6-4, 6-7 (6), 7-6 (4), 6-2.

"Sometimes emotions get the worst out of you, you know," Djokovic said, "or the best out of you, whatever you want to call it."

In Dzumhur's case, he was afflicted by jitters while on the verge of making it to a major's last 16 for the first time.

Dzumhur served for the match leading 6-5 in the fourth set. But everything fell apart with this sequence: forehand into the net, forehand wide, drop shot into the net, backhand into the net. Just like that, he'd been broken at love. A later errant backhand ended the tiebreaker.

Ahead 5-4 in the fifth, Dzumhur was one point from winning while Zverev served at 30-40. But Zverev — at 6-foot-6 (1.98 meters), he is 9 inches (20 centimeter­s) taller than Dzumhur — came up with the goods, a 118 mph service winner.

Dzumhur again helped Zverev, putting a pair of easy backhands into the net, then later said of the first of those: "That's the point that I will probably remember."

Perhaps Zverev will, too.

 ?? MICHEL EULER/AP PHOTO ?? Alexander Zverev returns a shot against Damir Dzumhur during their third round match on Friday in the French Open at the Roland Garros stadium in Paris.
MICHEL EULER/AP PHOTO Alexander Zverev returns a shot against Damir Dzumhur during their third round match on Friday in the French Open at the Roland Garros stadium in Paris.

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