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May 28, 2015

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Halep falls to Croat; Federer, Sharapova win

SIMONA Halep became the highest seeded player to exit the French Open so far as last year’s runner-up lost 5-7, 1-6 to Mirjana Lucic-Baroni in the second round yesterday.

The third-seeded Romanian, who reached her first major final at Roland Garros in 2014, struggled from the start on Court Suzanne Lenglen and was overpowered in the second set, slumping to her second straight defeat against her 70th-ranked opponent. The Croatian had also beaten Halep at the US Open last year.

Lucic-Baroni hit an ace on match point and raised both arms in delight. She finished with 29 winners, compared to five for Halep.

“It’s incredible, she’s just a great champion and I respect her so much,” Lucic-Baroni said. “It’s such a huge win.”

Up next for the Croatian is local favorite Alize Cornet.

“I wish at least three French people will cheer for me in that match,” Lucic-Baroni said.

Earlier, defending champion Maria Sharapova limited her mistakes to just eight unforced errors as she beat Russian Fed Cup teammate Vitalia Diatchenko 6-3, 6-1.

She will now get an early test in her bid for a third French Open title, having set up a third-round match against 2010 French Open finalist Samantha Stosur. The Australian swept to a 6-0, 6-1 victory over French wildcard Amandine Hesse.

The rout extended Stosur’s winning streak to seven matches after she arrived in Paris on the back of her first title this year in Strasbourg.

In men’s play, second-seeded Roger Federer made light work of Marcel Granollers, winning 6-2, 7-6 (1), 6-3, while 2014 Australian Open winner Stan Wawrinka reached the third round with a 6-3, 6-4, 5-7, 6-3 defeat of Dusan Lajovic. No. 5 Kei Nishikori and No. 12 Gilles Simon advanced in straight sets.

“Playing Maria is always a big challenge for me,” Stosur said. “No matter what surface it’s on, I don’t have a very good record at all.”

The 26th-seeded Stosur has not beaten Sharapova since a match on hardcourt in Tokyo three years ago, with Sharapova boasting a 14-2 career record against the Australian veteran. But Stosur can take confidence from their previous match on the Parisian clay in the fourth round last year, when she led 6-3, 4-3 before Sharapova won the next nine games.

“It’s one of those matches that’s a tough matchup, but I know I’ve got the game that can trouble her, and hopefully I can do it well and we will see what happens,” Stosur said.

After reuniting last month with former coach David Taylor, Stosur is hitting form at the right time. Before Strasbourg, where the 2011 US Open champion won a seventh career title, Stosur had won back-to-back matches just once in 10 tournaments.

Among other seeded women to advance yesterday were Czech No. 13 Lucie Safarova and No. 20 Sabine Lisicki of Germany.




 

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