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Alexander Zverev mystified about Grand Slam failures after Australian Open exit

Alexander Zverev was dumped out of the Australian Open by South Korean Chung Hyeon in five sets on Saturday after leading by two sets to one.

Published on: Jan 20, 2018, 16:05:04 IST
Agence France-Presse, Melbourne | By
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Another Grand Slam has come and gone for Alexander Zverev and the young German star can’t figure out why.

Alexander Zverev of Germany waves as he leaves after losing against Chung Hyeon of South Korea at the Australian Open on Saturday. (Reuters)
Alexander Zverev of Germany waves as he leaves after losing against Chung Hyeon of South Korea at the Australian Open on Saturday. (Reuters)

The world No.4 was dumped out of the year’s opening Grand Slam by 58th-ranked South Korean Chung Hyeon in five sets on Saturday after leading by two sets to one.

READ | Australian Open tennis: Alexander Zverev crashes out in third-round loss to Hyeon Chung

Chung claimed the scalp of his first top-five ranked opponent with a 5-7, 7-6 (7/3), 2-6, 6-3, 6-0 victory in 3hr 22min on Rod Laver Arena.

It continued Zverev’s frustrations at again failing to go beyond the fourth round in 11 Grand Slams.

He has been touted as the leader of the tennis new guard but he has not beaten a top-50 player in a best-of-five sets match.

“I have some figuring out to do, what happens to me in deciding moments in Grand Slams,” Zverev said.

READ | Maria Sharapova knocked out of Australian Open tennis by Angelique Kerber

“It happened at Wimbledon. It happened in New York. It happened here.

“I’m still young, so I got time. I definitely have some figuring out to do for myself.

Zverev reached the fourth round at Wimbledon last year but has never gone further than the third round at the Australian Open and French Open, and he has failed to go beyond the second round at the US Open.

He said what was disappointing for him in his latest defeat was that he felt he was playing well against Chung.

READ | Australian Open tennis: Tennys Sandgren’s fairytale ride to Round of 16

“I don’t think I played bad. I think I played really bad the fifth set, but apart from that, you know, in the first four sets, I think this was the best he can play,” he said.

“If he backs this up, then we’ll see how far he can go.”

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