Djokovic flattens Jaime Faria in second round of Australian Open

Teenager Fonseca crushes Rublev in dream Slam debut
MELBOURNE — Novak Djokovic continued to build into the Australian Open with a 6-1, 6-7(4), 6-3, 6-2 victory over Portuguese qualifier Jaime Faria in the second round on Wednesday, taking another step towards a 25th Grand Slam title.
For the top players, the first week of a major is all about finding a groove in the full heat of competition and Djokovic could not have wished for more from his first two opponents, both making their Grand Slam debuts.
On Monday, inspired American teenager Nishesh Basavareddy gave the 10-time Melbourne Park champion the runaround for the first hour of their first-round clash, and 21-year-old Faria presented another set of problems for Djokovic to solve.
Faria’s victory in the opening round was his first at tour level, while Djokovic moved out of a tie with Roger Federer to claim another record merely by taking to the court for his 430th Grand Slam match.
The gap in experience looked like a chasm in a one-sided opening set but Faria stormed back into the contest by winning the second set in a tiebreaker on the back of some fine ball-striking and all-court athleticism.
Djokovic, with one-time adversary Andy Murray again in his coaching box, broke for 4-2 in the third set, however, and fully quashed the threat offered by the world number 125 in the fourth to set up a meeting with Czech Tomas Machac.
TEENAGER FONSECA CRUSHES RUBLEV
Brazilian teenager Joao Fonseca launched his Grand Slam career in spectacular fashion as the qualifier took down Russian ninth seed Andrey Rublev 7-6(1), 6-3, 7-6(5) in the opening round of the Australian Open on Tuesday.
Fonseca became the last player to book a second-round spot but the wait was well worth it as the 18-year-old delivered a stunning display that lived up to the hype.
He looked completely at home on his Grand Slam main draw debut having waltzed through the qualifying draw without dropping a set and all those who stayed late on Margaret Court Arena will not forget him in a hurry.
One almost felt a little sorry for Rublev who became Fonseca’s first victim at a major. The Russian, well-known for chastising himself on court, often painfully, could do little to stem the flow of brilliance across the net.
The Brazilians in the crowd loved it and so did the neutrals as a new star of the men’s game illuminated the night. Fonseca is only the second teenager since 1973 to defeat an ATP top 10 player in their maiden Grand Slam main draw match.
Fonseca arrived on court on the back of a 13-match winning streak at all levels and brimming with confidence.
There was nothing between the players in the opening set with the only break point being saved by Fonseca at 3-4.
But the tiebreak was one-way traffic as Fonseca’s forehand left Rublev reeling.
There was a swagger about Fonseca in the second set as he used the energy of the crowd to surge further in front of a player who reached the quarter-finals last year.
Rublev, 27, was not about to be humiliated though and provided some stiff resistance in the third set, perhaps hoping to hang in and wait for any dip in Fonseca’s energy levels.
But the Brazilian answered every question in emphatic fashion, showing not the slightest hint of nerves despite playing on the biggest stage of his fledgling career.
Rublev smashed a racket in frustration in the third-set tiebreak but offered a warm embrace and a smile as he congratulated Fonseca at the net after a 51st winner from the Brazilian flashed past him on match point.
Fonseca, ranked 112 but surely heading much, much higher in a hurry, will face Italy’s Lorenzo Sonego next. — Reuters