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MELBOURNE - World number three Novak Djokovic and U.S. Open champion Juan Martin del Potro kicked off their Australian Open preparations with easy first-round wins at the Kooyong Classic in Melbourne on Wednesday.
Novak Djokovic of Serbia returns a shot against Tommy Haas of Germany at the Kooyong Classic tennis tournament in Melbourne January 13, 2010. [Agencies] |
Del Potro cruised to a 6-3 6-3 victory over Croatian Ivan Ljubicic, before Serbian Djokovic made light work of experienced German Tommy Haas 6-2 6-3 at the eight-man invitational event.
Despite blustery conditions at the Kooyong Lawn Tennis Club, Del Potro was in fine touch for his first hit-out of the season, although he may hope for tougher encounters this week after Ljubicic repeatedly gifted him key points with unforced errors.
"The weather conditions were tough, a lot of wind," Del Potro told reporters. "I returned very good, I served very good so that's important for this kind of match, this kind of surface. It's a good victory in the beginning of the season, of course."
Juan Martin Del Potro of Argentina waves to the crowd after defeating Ivan Ljubicic of Croatia at the Kooyong Classic tennis tournament in Melbourne January 13, 2010.[Agencies] |
After breaking the 24th-ranked Croatian in the opening game, Del Potro cracked two forehand winners to set up two set points at 5-3, and was duly handed the set when his opponent double-faulted.
Ljubicic raised his game after conceding an early break in the second, clubbing three aces in a row to save two match points at 5-2, then prising a break-back point in the following game.
The towering Argentine, however, held serve with an ace and sealed the win on his fourth match point after the Croatian netted a forehand.
The 30-year-old Ljubicic, who took Roger Federer's place after the world number one elected to skip his usual Australian Open warm-up, was philosophical about the loss despite spending most of the time between points frowning with his head bowed.
"It wasn't all that bad actually. Probably the most disappointing thing is that I didn't feel bad at all and I still lost 6-3 6-3," he said. "Definitely, I will have to still improve with each match here.
The 2008 Australian Open champion Djokovic raced to a one-set lead after breaking 18th-ranked Haas early and carried the momentum into the second in a controlled display.
Fernando Verdasco of Spain and Fernando Gonzalez of Chile were scheduled to play later on Wednesday, before Swedish world number eight Robin Soderling's match against Jo-Wilfried Tsonga of France.