Roddick Again Stymied on Euro Red Clay at ATP Rome



Posted on May 6, 2004


While former No. 1 Andy Roddick has thrived on the claycourts in Houston, the red dirt in Europe, with its Spaniard- and Argentine-packed draws, have been a different story.

Roddick made a quick exit at the Masters Series-Rome Tuesday, losing to Argentine Guillermo Canas 7-6(7), 6-1 in an error-filled display by the American.

"I knew I had my chances, I already defeated (Roddick) in Toronto," Canas said. "I knew I had to play my serving games at best and that I had to profit from the fact that his serve is slower than usual (on clay)."

Roddick blew three set points in the first set, then double faulted to drop his serve in the first game of the second set, and it was warm-up-the-bus from that point.

"I wasn't concentrating for one reason or another, I'm not sure," Roddick said. "I just went out there, I was rushing things. I definitely don't think I put forth my best effort today, so it's a little disappointing...I had a tennis match to play and, you know, I didn't play it. I had plenty of days to get ready and kind of get myself mentally ready, and I didn't do that. That's pretty much the bottom line."

Last year Roddick lost in the first round at Monte Carlo, and the second round at Rome and Hamburg. This year Roddick skipped the Monte Carlo stop, and it remains to be seen whether he now pulls stakes and skips Hamburg next week.

One other seed was knocked out Tuesday when Barcelona winner Tommy Robredo ground up No. 9 seed Mark Philippoussis in three sets, continuing the Aussie's miserable 2004 campaign.

Seeded winners on the day were (1)Roger Federer (d. Bjorkman), (7)Sebastien Grosjean (d. F.Lopez), (8)Nicolas Massu (d. (Q)Dell'Acqua in three), (12)Jiri Novak (d. Blake 6-1 in the third, with the American again going into third-set fold mode), and (14)Martin "Berzerk" Verkerk (d. T.Martin in three). No. 15 seed Lleyton Hewitt trailed Italian wildcard Andreas Seppi 5-7, 3-3 when rain halted play late Tuesday night.

Other un-seeds into the second round were Filippo Volandi (d. Kiefer 6-0 in the third, with dancing in the streets in Rome for an Italian actually winning a match), former No. 1 Marat Safin (d. Pescosolido), defending champ Felix Mantilla (d. Ginepri 6-0 in the third, winning the last 12 games, saving four match points), Croat Ivan Ljubicic (d. Clement 7-6 in the third), Georgia's (the country, stupid, not the state) Irakli "Freak Show" Labadze (d. Gaudio, too much Barcelona final from Sunday for the Argentine), Max "The Beast" Mirnyi (d. (LL)Koubek), Peru's Luis "Me So" Horna (d. Youzhny 7-6 in the third, saving two match points), Morocco's Hicham Arazi (d. Ramirez Hidalgo), and Munich winner Nikolay Davydenko (d. Sargsian).

On court Wedneday are (15)Hewitt vs. (WC)Seppi (to finish), (1)Federer vs. Costa (Fed leads 2-1, first meeting on dirt), (11)Schalken vs. Volandri, Safin vs. (10)Srichaphan (tied 1-1), (6)Moya vs. Ljubicic (Loob leads 3-1), Davydenko vs. (13)Gonzo, Stepanek vs. (4)Henman, Saretta vs. (5)Nalbandian, (15)Hewitt or (WC)Seppi vs. Pavel, Spadea vs. Arazi, (Q)Ferrer vs. (7)Grosjean, (Q)"Dr." Ivo Karlovic vs. Robredo, Luis "Me So" Horna vs. (14)Berzerk, Zabaleta vs. Mantilla (Mantilla leads 6-4), (12)Novak vs. The Beast, (8)Massu vs. Freak Show, Sanchez vs. Canas, and a 2003 Masters Cup Doubles rematch in (4)Knowles/Nestor vs. Argentines Etlis/Rodriguez.

WTA REVIEW/PREVIEW
No. 6 seed Jennifer Capriati got off to a good start at the WTA stop in Berlin Tuesday, easing past German wildcard Julia Schruff 6-3, 6-1.

"She (Schruff)'s a good little player but from the end of the first set I started to play really well," said the 28-year-old Capriati, still maintaining her buffet-style physique, possibly due to a back injury that has limited her through much of 2004.

"I'm extra eager and hungry," Capriati added. Enough said.

Seeds joining Capriati in the winner's circle Tuesday were (5)Nadia Petrova (d. Barna), (9)Vera "Warren" Zvonareva (d. (Q)Perebiynis), (10)Svetlana Kuznetsova (d. (WC)Mikaelian), (13)Patty Schnyder (d. Daniela "The Walking Stick" Hantuchova), and (17)Maria "Grunt-o-rama" Sharapova (d. Safina in three). Only one seed made an exit on Tuesday in (15)Jelena Dokic, schooled by American Meghann Shaughnessy 6-0, 6-3.

Other un-seeds into the second round were Hungarian Petra Mandula (d. (LL)Vakulenko), Barbara "Now I Give a" Schett (d. (LL)Srebotnik), Fabiola "The Fabulous One" Zuluaga (d. Testud), Argentina's Gisela Dulko (d. (Q)Pastikova), French veteran Nathalie Dechy (d. (Q)Strycova), Croat Karolina "The Spreminator" Sprem (d. (WC)Groenefeld), Greece's Eleni Daniilidou (d. (Q)Golovin in three), and Russian Elena Likhovtseva (d. Pierce 7-6 in the third).

On Wednesday's tip the big girls come out to play in Dulko vs. Mauresmo, Clijsters vs. Marrero, Venus vs. Daniilidou, Kostanic vs. Myskina, Dementieva vs. Cohen-Aloro, Mandula vs. Sharapova, Likhovtseva vs. Sugiyama, Schnyder vs. Gagliardi in an all-Swiss, Sanchez Lorenzo vs. Chladkova, Suarez vs. Schett, Zvonareva vs. Zuluaga, Sprem vs. Shaughnessy, Bovina vs. Kuznetsova, and Dechy vs. Smashnova-Pistolesi.

FREE TENNIS-X E-NEWSLETTER
Subscribe to the FREE Tennis-X daily e-newsletter, click on the logo on the top right of the page at www.tennis-x.com. Daily results, daily previews, daily notes and quotes, daily smack on the dysfunctional world of pro tennis.

NEWS, NOTES, QUOTES AND BARBS
Green is apparently not Andy Roddick's color. Roddick, unshaven and dressed in a green Reebok shirt with matching Reebok "trucker" hat, blew three set points in losing to Argentine Guillermo Canas in the first round at the Masters Series-Rome Tuesday...The top Argentines missing last month's Davis Cup quarterfinals may run deeper than their "injuries" that forced them to miss the match against Belarus. Last week Guillermo Coria and David Nalbandian sent a letter to the Argentine Tennis Association asking that Davis Cup captain Gustavo Luza be fired, so Luza has stepped down. The letter was also signed by three other Argentine players. Argentina lost to Belarus 5-0 in that tie...Greek police threatened Tuesday to start a series of pre-Olympic strikes to demand hazard pay for helping safeguard the games; nice organization, look for more players to pull from the tennis competition...Carlos Moya says don't pick a fight with the Spanish Armada, they'll kick your ass on any surface: "I think we prove that we can do well everywhere. My example or (Juan Carlos) Ferrero's or (Alex) Corretja's, you know, all of us have won a big title on hardcourts, even indoor. Ferrero has been No. 1 not only having the claycourt points, but final in US Open, final in a Masters. So now (Rafael) Nadal is coming and (Fernando) Verdasco, Feliciano (Lopez), they all play maybe even better on hardcourt than on clay. I think you have to adapt these days. Spain, we're doing well in that fact."...Goran Ivanisevic says he may be feeling God's wrath after promising that if he won Wimbledon he would stop playing, then continuing to play: "My shoulder is getting worse. Last year when I tried to come back, I step on the shell in Miami, two and a half months, I need to have operation. Like, you know, is doing something, you know. I get scare sometimes, you know, 'Sorry, (looking up) but...I am going through the wall, you know. I want to come to Wimbledon. I think I deserve that; maybe I don't, but I think I do...Something was written there (winning Wimbledon), that it has to be. And then why? And that rain against (Tim) Henman also came in the right time. Why? He knows why (pointing up). But he also knows why now I have pain, you know, and why everything, you know -- other things are happen, you know, to me, this problems, that problems. I am every week injured. Okay, I am older, but back, shoulder, this, foot. But still I gonna keep playing. Maybe he's gonna struck me with the lightning."...The comeback of the day Tuesday in Rome went to defending champion Felix Mantilla, who saved four match points and rallied from a 5-7, 1-5 deficit to defeat American Robby Ginepri 5-7, 7-5, 6-0. Mantilla won the last 12 games of the match to advance to the second round...Roger Federer on facing Al Costa today in Rome: "I'm looking forward to this match. I'm really going to try to get revenge on him -- the match he beat me last year in Miami where I had a few match points. That's definitely one of the players I'm happy to play against. I haven't seen him around too much lately, so I guess he still plays pretty much the same when he won the French Open." Ha, guess you really haven't seen him lately, no one sees you when you go out in the first round each week...Andy Roddick on his claycourt struggles: "It's no secret that it's not my favorite surface, but it's, you know, definitely something that I'm trying to get better on. I think everybody has a weak surface; clay happens to be mine. But, you know, it's something I'm working on to improve. I don't know. It's weird because usually I feel really good on clay. It's just when I have an off-day, I feel really bad."...Kim Clijsters says wearing the wrist brace has its positives: "My slice has improved because I've been doing that so much. It's almost like Steffi Graf's at the moment. The slice was not the strongest part of my game, and that's improved a lot now. I've got to be careful that now I can hit backhands I don't overuse it..I'm not going to practice four hours a day. On the clay especially it's tough. The rallies take longer and you need more spin on the ball. The main thing that I'm going to focus on at the moment is probably Wimbledon. That's where I want to play at my best, and that's where I want to train as much as I would like to. I'll try to play the French, but it will still be with the brace and that will definitely be restricting me in a lot of shots...It is distracting, but there's nothing I can do about it so I'm just trying to take the positives out of it. At least I can play with it. I was sitting and doing nothing for five weeks and that was even more frustrating, so I'm just happy to be out on the court with or without the brace." In other words -- tanking the clay season, looking forward to Wimbledon, now have the Steffi slice (you wish)...Wheelchair tennis player Miles Thompson of the U.S. was suspended for three months by the International Tennis Federation on Tuesday after testing positive for cocaine. Way to skip the nandrolone and go straight for the blow...Arantxa Sanchez-Vicario is back on the doubles court this week in Berlin, practicing in a bid to become the first tennis player to take part in five Olympics: "It's a personal challenge and something I'm really looking forward to," the 32-year-old said. "I'm not planning a comeback on the tour. After the Olympics I will probably play a few exhibitions but that will be it." Sanchez just hopes she doesn't run into Bud Collins, and would probably take a swing at the American commentator if she has to hear "The Barcelona Bumblebee" one more time.