National Post

DJOKOVIC OFF TO WINNING START WITH NEW COACH ANDRE AGASSI.

NO. 2-RANKED SERBIAN HO-HUM IN OPENING WIN

- Howard Fendrich

If Novak Djokovic was hoping to take a little pressure and attention off himself after some rough results, he might very well have found the perfect way to do that by adding Andre Agassi as a coaching consultant of sorts for the French Open.

Well, for up to a week of the tournament, anyway.

With Agassi seated in the stands, generally expression­less during the match and silent afterward, the No. 2- seeded Djokovic was not always at his clean-swinging best while beating Marcel Granollers 6- 3, 6- 4, 6-2 on Monday to begin the defence of the title that allowed him to complete a career Grand Slam at Roland Garros a year ago.

“I mean, it’s hard to say whether there is significan­t difference on the court, because it’s only a few days that we are together,” Djokovic said. “So it’s going to take a little bit of time. ... I’m patient and, for us, this is a great way to start off our collaborat­ion and friendship and get to know each other and then see where it takes us.”

Agassi won t he 1 999 French Open among his eight Grand Slam titles.

On a relatively quiet Day 2, Rafael Nadal started his pursuit of a record 10th French Open championsh­ip with a 6-1, 6- 4, 6-1 victory over Benoit Paire. Other seeded men advancing included No. 5 Milos Raonic, No. 7 Marin Cilic and No. 10 David Goffin, while No. 14 Jack Sock, the top-ranked U.S. man, and No. 31 Gilles Simon — both in Nadal’s section of the draw — plus No. 32 Mischa Zverev all lost.

Defending women’s champion Garbine Muguruza and former No. 1 Caroline Wozniacki won in straight sets, but two seeded American women joined Sock on the way out: No. 19 CoCo Vandeweghe and No. 25 Lauren Davis.

Leave it to the No. 4-seeded Nadal to win relatively simply and then lament a portion of his performanc­e.

“For me,” he said, “it’s important to serve a little bit better than what I did today.”

Djokovic, for his part, had plenty to say about their partnershi­p, which sounds more like a brief experiment than the start of a long-term arrangemen­t, even if that’s what the Serb insisted he hopes it can become.

“Well, he’s going to stay ... I hope, until the end of this week. Then he has to leave, because he has some scheduled ... things that he cannot reschedule. So that’s all,” said Djokovic, whose 29 unforced errors were one more than Granollers’ total. “I’m going to try to use the time spent with him as best as I can, as best as we can. So far, plenty of informatio­n, plenty of things to kind of process.”

A year ago, when Djokovic finally fulfilled his quest to win a trophy in Paris, he was working with Boris Becker — who was on hand Monday and visited with Agassi — and Marian Vajda. But Djokovic split with those coaches, as well as other members of his entourage, hoping to regain the groove that made him the first man in nearly a half-century to win four consecutiv­e majors.

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 ?? JULIAN FINNEY / GETTY IMAGES ?? Novak Djokovic, right, has hired Andre Agassi as part of his bid to become the first man in the Open era to win each of the four majors twice.
JULIAN FINNEY / GETTY IMAGES Novak Djokovic, right, has hired Andre Agassi as part of his bid to become the first man in the Open era to win each of the four majors twice.

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