The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Sharapova ousted early by qualifier

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LONDON — These are not the sorts of matches Maria Sharapova is supposed to lose, letting lead after lead slip away Tuesday against a qualifier ranked 132nd — and in the first round of Wimbledon, no less.

Then again, at this edition of The Championsh­ips, as they prefer to call the event around here, the initial 48 hours have provided more surprising exits than anyone’s accustomed to: A total of seven top-10 men’s and women’s seeds departed in the opening round, more than in any previous year in the profession­al era’s half-century.

That includes two-time champion and No. 8 seed Petra Kvitova, who was sent home by Aliaksandr­a Sasnovich of Belarus 6-4, 4-6, 6-0 a few hours before 2004 titlist Sharapova folded against Vitalia Diatchenko in a 6-7 (3), 7-6 (3), 6-4 loss she seemingly controlled time and again before dropping the last three games.

“Sometimes,” Sharapova said, “you put yourself in a better or winning position, and you don’t finish.”

A 15-month doping ban kept her out of the grasscourt Grand Slam tournament in 2016, and an injury sidelined her a year ago. It looked as if it would be a pleasant, straightfo­rward return when she went ahead by a set and a break at 5-2.

Sharapova then served for the match at 5-3, but faltered. After being pushed to a third set, Sharapova went up a break at 2-1. That edge disappeare­d right away. She went up another break at 4-3. That advantage, too, was given right back. Sharapova’s collapse eventually ended, perhaps fittingly, with her 11th double-fault.

How unlikely was this result?

Since losing the first two Grand Slam matches of her career as a teenager, Sharapova was 49-1 in openers at majors, 13-0 at Wimbledon.

She’s a former No. 1, now seeded 24th, who owns five Grand Slam titles.

And Diatchenko? Repeatedly sidetracke­d by injuries of one sort or another, the 27-year-old Russian came into the day 0-2 at Wimbledon and 8-25 overall in main-draw matches at all tour-level events.

On the men’s side, Novak Djokovic equaled John McEnroe’s number of matches won at Wimbledon by beating American Tennys Sandgren in straight sets.

Djokovic won 6-3, 6-1, 6-2 on No. 1 Court for his 59th match victory at the All England Club. That puts him level with McEnroe in fifth place on the all-time list, behind Roger Federer, Jimmy Connors, Boris Becker and Pete Sampras.

Djokovic is looking for his fourth Wimbledon title, while Sandgren — who reached the Australian Open quarterfin­als — was making his debut in the tournament.

American Frances Tiafoe saved 13 of the 15 break points he faced to upset 30th-seeded Fernando Verdasco.

The 20-year-old Tiafoe relied on a strong serve to win 7-6 (6), 7-6 (5), 3-6, 6-3 over the Spanish veteran.

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