Australian No 1. Tomic survives early scare in China Open | Inquirer Sports

Australian No 1. Tomic survives early scare in China Open

/ 06:54 PM September 30, 2013

Australia’s Bernard Tomic . AFP

BEIJING — Bernard Tomic made it through to the second round of the China Open Monday, claiming victory over homegrown star Zhang Ze after the wildcard gave him an early scare.

The Australian number one began slowly, and was forced to save two set points against Zhang as he clawed his way back from being 5-3 down.

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Zhang, who is 190th in the world rankings, appeared to be closing in on the set as he took a 2-0 lead in the tie break, but Tomic eventually won it 7/4.

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The 20-year-old then broke Zhang’s serve early in the second set and never looked to be in danger as he sealed victory with the scores at 7-6(7/4) 6-4.

Tomic is number 55 in the world rankings and considered one of the rising young guns of men’s tennis. However, he has developed a bad boy reputation, largely because of the actions of his father and coach.

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John Tomic received an eight-month suspended jail sentence earlier this month for headbutting his son’s former training partner, Thomas Drouet, breaking his nose and knocking him out in a May assault outside a Madrid hotel.

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The assault led to him being banned from a series of major tennis tournaments by the ATP.

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It was a disappointing end to the China Open for Zhang, who was the home crowd star in Beijing last year when he knocked out France’s Richard Gasquet in the second round.

The Chinese number one could have faced a re-match against Gasquet if he had overcome Tomic. However, the Australian will instead play the fifth seed in the second round if Gasquet wins his first-round match against German Florian Mayer.

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Zhang praised Tomic’s development as a player in recent years, saying his opponent has become more disciplined.

“We were playing juniors matches before and when Tomic was a junior he was sometimes sloppy and he gave many free points,” the 23-year-old said.

“Now he has grown a lot and he is more serious on every single point when he plays,” Zhang said, adding that there are “not that many free points” against Tomic.

In the women’s competition, it was a successful day for the three Serbian players, who all overcame the first hurdle in Beijing.

Eighth seed Jelana Jankovic needed three sets to overcome Russian Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova, but finally defeated her opponent within two hours at 1-6, 6-4, 6-0. Compatriot Ana Ivanovic claimed victory over Italian Flavia Pennetta 7-6 (11/9), 6-1.

Ivanovic had been trailing 1-5 in her first set before staging a fightback.

“I really struggled to find my rhythm in the beginning. I felt the ball was flying,” she told reporters after the game.

“I didn’t really think I could come back in the first set, but I really played well and stepped up when it was very tight. So that gave me confidence.”

Bojana Jovanovski rounded off a hat-trick for the Serbians, claiming victory over Romanian Sorana Cirstea 6-3, 6-2.

The other early game saw Canadian Eugenie Bouchard beat Slovakian Magdalena Rybarikova 6-4, 6-1.

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The China Open will reach its climax on October 6.

TAGS: Australia, Bernard Tomic, China Open, Sports, Tennis, Zhang Ze

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