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Indians at Aus Open: Sania advances, Bopanna loses controversial match

January 20, 2017 13:42 IST

India's Sania Mirza and her doubles partner Czech Republic's Barbora Strycova at the Australian Open

IMAGE: India's Sania Mirza and her doubles partner Czech Republic's Barbora Strycova at the Australian Open. Photograph: Jack Thomas/Getty Images

It was a day of mixed fortunes for Indian tennis players in the season-opening Australian Open with Sania Mirza sailing into the third round of the women's doubles event even while compatriot Rohan Bopanna crashed out of the men's doubles, in Melbourne on Friday.

Fourth seeds Sania and her Czech partner Barbora Strycova eased past the Australian-Chinese pair of Samantha Stosur and Shuai Zhang 6-1, 6-4 in one hour 21 minutes in a second round duel.

The Indo-Czech combination, who finished runners-up at last week's Apia International in Sydney, will next play Japanese pair of Eri Hozumi and Miyu Kato.

It was curtains for Bopanna in the men's doubles event and he and his new partner Pablo Cuevas of Uruguay were knocked out by unseeded Australian pair of Alex Bolt and Bradley Mousley in the second round.

In the women's doubles encounter, Sania and Strycova came up with a dominant display from the word go and broke their opponents twice to race to a 4-0 lead in the first set.

Stosur and Zhang managed to break Sania's serve once to reduce the margin to 1-4 but the Indian-Czech pair broke back and went on to pocket the first set from their third set point.

In the second set, Sania once again conceded her serve in the second game to trail 0-3.

But Sania and Strycova got their acts together in time and won three straight games to level the scores at 3-3.

The Indo-Czech pair then broke their opponents with a forehand volley to take a 5-4 lead and serve for the match.

But Sania and Strycova were made to work hard by Stosur and Zhang as the Indo-Czech duo had to save five break points and needed four match points to win the final game that lasted over 13 minutes.

15th seed Bopanna and Cuevas, lost 6-2, 6-7(2), 4-6 to their unseeded opponents in one hour and 55 minutes to put an end to the Indian challenge in the men's doubles competition.

A photo grab of Rohan Bopanna and his new doubles partner Pablo Cuevas at the Australian OpenBopanna/Cuevas and Bolt/Mousley exchanged three service breaks in the opening three games of the first set, Bopanna and Cuevas winning two of those to lead 2-1. They held serve twice and then broke serve once again before serving out the set, winning 28 points to 19 for their opponents.

Bopanna and Cuevas pocketed the first rather easily to seize the initiative.

But the second set turned out to be more competitive and proceeded on serve. However, Bopanna and Cuevas faltered in the tiebreak as Bolt and Mousley went 5-2 ahead with two forehand winners.

The Australians got four set points with a forehand volley winner and then pocketed the set on the first, courtesy a forehand unforced error from Bopanna and Cuevas.

With the match level at one set apiece, the decider went on serve in the first six games before Bolt and Mousley broke Bopanna's serve with a forehand winner to take a 4-3 lead.

Thereafter, the set went on serve as Bopanna and Cuevas failed to break back their opponents to concede the defeat.

Bopanna later blamed a "horrendous call" at a crucial juncture in the match from the chair umpire as the reason behind his early ouster from the men's doubles event.

The contentious call was made on Cuevas's serve, which was broken in the seventh game of the final set. On break point, a volley from Bolt sailed wide but the chair umpire ruled that the ball had brushed Bopanna's racket on the way out.

Protesting the call, Bopanna and Cuevas were involved in an animated conversation with the chair umpire at the change of ends.

"I can't believe you made that call. That's a horrendous call. No one heard (the deflection) and you only heard it.

That's what I am really surprised," said a furious Bopanna while arguing with the chair umpire.

He later tweeted: "Very hard to digest a loss in a match when the REF decides the outcome.Reactions of opponents says it all.@AustralianOpen #MostShockingCall."

Image (bottom, left): A photo grab of Rohan Bopanna and his new doubles partner Pablo Cuevas at the Australian Open

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