China Daily (Hong Kong)

Victorious Zhang gets into a baseline groove

Chinese No 1 shows his class on clay with massive win in the Italian capital

- By SUN XIAOCHEN sunxiaoche­n@chinadaily.com.cn

Confident, composed and convincing — another clay-court Masters win now seems like business as usual for Zhang Zhizhen, as China’s top ace continues to cement his elite status on the profession­al circuit.

Even with the majority of the crowd cheering against him at the Foro Italico, Zhang proved that he’s the favorite on clay — even when facing a much higher-ranked opponent in Ben Shelton, the 2023 US Open semifinali­st — after the Chinese world No 56 routed the 14thranked American power hitter in straight sets to advance into the fourth round of the ATP 1000 Rome Masters on Sunday.

A rare talent from China adapting particular­ly well to clay tennis, Zhang’s round-of-16 appearance in Rome, the third time he’s reached this stage of a top-flight Masters tournament, has maintained his feel-good momentum on the surface in recent years, sparked by a careerbest quarterfin­al run at last year’s Madrid Masters.

Zhang attributed his fifth career win against a top-15 opponent to a solid pre-match preparatio­n.

“Literally everything I’d prepared against him worked out today on court,” Zhang said of his 6-2, 6-4 eliminatio­n of Shelton in just over an hour in the Italian capital.

“I watched his matches in Madrid this year and his performanc­es when he reached the final in Houston. I anticipate­d his shots and returned his serves quite well.

“I am particular­ly happy with the fact that I managed to stay at a consistent­ly high level all match long, without dropping my form to allow him any real chances (to come back). I had a great baseline game today, which gave me a huge advantage on clay,” said Zhang, who will earn 88,440 euros ($95,280) in prize money for reaching the fourth round in Rome.

The Rome win also helped Zhang avenge a major loss to Shelton during their first and only previous encounter, when they met in the opening round at the 2023 Australian Open. The 21-year-old southpaw prevailed in a five-set thriller to deny Zhang a first main-draw win in Melbourne.

The rising American star, who is also improving his game on clay, highlighte­d by his first tour-level title in Houston, Texas, last month, found himself vulnerable to Zhang’s almost flawless baseline game on Sunday, when the Chinese No 1 attacked Shelton’s second serves aggressive­ly, winning 58 percent of his points on the receiving end.

Although not serving well himself, Zhang’s resilience, the quality and variety of his shots, as well as his footwork, carried him through, though, as he won 75 and 74 percent of points from his first and second serves, respective­ly, converting three out of eight break points to dictate the match.

Next up for Zhang will be Brazilian qualifier Thiago Monteiro, who’s made an equally impressive run in Rome, overcoming former world No 6 Gael Monfils of France and world No 35, Australian Jordan Thompson, to reach the round of 16 for the first time in his career.

The Brazilian left-hander’s recent surge on clay also includes an upset of world No 7 Stefanos Tsitsipas in the second round of last month’s Madrid Masters.

Zhang revealed that he’s approachin­g an unknown test against the Brazilian veteran, in a matchup that’s long overdue.

“I don’t know his game too much, but he should be in red-hot form now, having won a series of matches in Madrid and here,” said the 27-year-old Shanghai native. He vividly remembers how he missed a much earlier encounter against Monteiro seven years ago.

In just his second year playing predominan­tly on the pro circuit, Zhang was drawn against Monteiro in a first-round qualifier at the 2017 ATP 250 Shenzhen Open, but later had to play his compatriot Bai Yan after Monteiro opted out of playing to compete in another Chinese tournament in Chengdu, where he made it directly to the main draw via ranking.

“Maybe he helped me reach my first career quarterfin­al on the tour somehow,” Zhang joked about the fact that he went all the way to the third round in Shenzhen that year without having to play the much higher-ranked Monteiro in the first qualifier.

Now, on the verge of cracking the world top 50 again, Zhang, who enjoyed his highest ranking at No 46 in February, said the open competitio­n in Rome at this stage, following a series of injury-forced withdrawal­s and early exits of major stars, has raised everyone’s ambitions, including his own.

“I’ve never considered that far to be honest,” he said of the expectatio­n of some fans for a run to the final. “Indeed, the draw looks quite even in my quarter, yet it means that every match from here will be a tough fight. No one is a clear-cut favorite and anyone can win.”

“I will take it one match at a time, but if I have to set a target, I will set my sights on the semifinals,” said Zhang, whose only other quarterfin­al berth at a Masters was at his home hard-court tournament in Shanghai last year.

 ?? REUTERS ?? China's Zhang Zhizhen celebrates winning his round-of-32 match against Ben Shelton of the United States during the Italian Open in Rome on Sunday. Zhang won 6-2, 6-4.
REUTERS China's Zhang Zhizhen celebrates winning his round-of-32 match against Ben Shelton of the United States during the Italian Open in Rome on Sunday. Zhang won 6-2, 6-4.

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