The Star Malaysia

Last year’s heartbreak just fires up Canadian Raonic

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MILOS Raonic said his tough defeat in last year’s Australian Open semi-finals had given him extra motivation to come back and lift the trophy after he cruised into round two.

Injury-hobbled Raonic crashed out in five sets against Andy Murray in 2016. The Canadian, now ranked at world No. 3, opened his 2017 campaign with a straight-sets win over Dustin Brown yesterday.

Raonic spent just 93 minutes dishing out a 6-3, 6-4, 6-2 lesson to the dreadlocke­d Brown. Afterwards, he said the pain of last year was a driving factor as he bids for his first Grand Slam title.

“It’s a perspectiv­e,” Raonic said. “Emotionall­y, as much and as painful as it was, you sort of understand that there is that other side of the spectrum where you can have that kind of joy if you can go through on those moments.

“So it’s something I’m definitely itching to experience ... this is a tournament I have performed consistent­ly my best at throughout my career.

“So I always do feel good coming here, and I want to see what I can do to try to have that experience.”

Raonic, who next plays in-form Sydney Internatio­nal winner Gilles Muller, didn’t offer Brown many chances on his booming serve with just three break point opportunit­ies which all went unconverte­d.

He cranked up his fastest serve of 235kph on a second serve.

“I was up 40-15. I had some space to go for it a little bit,” he recalled.

He sent down 18 aces among his 46 winners and won an impres- sive 82% of his first serves in a dominant performanc­e.

“I took care of my serve. I broke quite early in all the sets,” he said.

“Just dropped off a little bit where I faced a few sort of dangers on my service games in the beginning of the third set, end of the second.

“But other than that, I returned pretty solid when I had to. I stepped up and I played well.” — AFP

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