DIMITROV SURVIVES NEAR-COLLAPSE IN PARIS TO EDGE TIPSAREVIC IN FIVE
What looked to be a routine opening-round victory for Grigor Dimitrov at Roland Garros soon turned into a Sunday nightmare. From a two-sets-and-a-break lead to being six points away from defeat, Dimitrov held on to prevail 6-3, 6-0, 3-6, 6-7 (4), 6-4 over Janko Tipsarevic.
The Bulgarian was in total command, displaying signs of the shot-making and confidence that vaulted him inside the Top 3 at the end of 2017. From 2-3 in the first set, Dimitrov claimed the next 11 games and was dominant in all facets. But like he’s experienced much throughout the past 18 months, his inability to close was exposed.
To his credit, Tipsarevic raised his level, dialing up first serves under pressure to keep Dimitrov off balance and executing large forehand cuts. Dimitrov’s standards haven’t dropped much—he produced 56 winners to just 25 unforced errors in the first four sets. His backhand let him down in several key moments, including the final point of the fourth-set tiebreaker when he shanked a pass attempt against the surprise serve-and-volley tactic of Tipsarevic.
The Serbian was soon visited by the trainer and showed signs of fatigue in the decisive set. He began to go for broke, aiming to end points as quickly as possible with free-swinging groundstrokes. It worked until the ninth game, when Dimitrov was able to extend the rallies and finally regain control. The world No. 47 was forced to save a break point before Tipsarevic’s final big swing landed wide.
Since winning the 2017 ATP Finals, the 47th ranked Dimitrov is 34-26 (10-7 in 2019) and is yet to return to the winner’s circle since lifting his biggest career title in London. In the second round, the 28-year-old will meet No. 11-seeded Marin Cilic, a 6-3, 7-5, 6-1 winner over Thomas Fabbiano.