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Wawrinka, unable to defend his 2016 Flushing Meadows title after undergoing two knee surgeries last year, said yesterday that he wasn’t surprised at the challenge produced by 139th-ranked Humbert, a left-hander who is playing his first tour-level event this week after a dominant summer on the developmental Challenger circuit.
“I knew it would be a difficult match,” said Wawrinka, who was pleased to find himself feeling fit after prevailing 7-6 (7/5) 4-6 6-3 7-5 in three hours and 21 minutes. “My level is there. I’m playing really good tennis,” he said. “I’m 33 years old, first time after big surgery that I’m pushing myself that much, but I think I did enough hard work to know and have confidence in my fitness.
“I think there is a good chance that I’m playing better the next round,” added Wawrinka who faces Canadian Milos Raonic for a place in the last 16. Meanwhile Murray, the 2012 US Open winner, who was playing his first Grand Slam since Wimbledon of last year, is still fighting to find full fitness after hip surgery in January.
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But he was unable to convert any of them before Verdasco closed out the win on Arthur Ashe Stadium on his third match point. “I think with Andy it’s always tough — not to close it just to play every point because he’s an unbelievable fighter,” Verdasco said.
“Even with all the surgery and not 100 per cent physically he’s a fighter.” Verdasco booked a third-round meeting with another former champion, third-seeded Argentine Juan Martin del Potro who beat American Denis Kudla 6-3 6-1 7-6 (7/4).
For the second straight day players faced soaring heat and humidity. The US Open’s extreme heat policy was in effect, allowing women a 10-minute heat break before a third set and men the same before a fourth set to give players a chance to cool down.
The policy, a first for men in Grand Slam play, led to controversy as Murray complained that Verdasco conferred with members of his team during the break, a violation of the rules that organizers announced. “I’m not blaming Fernando and his team, they probably weren’t trying to break any rules,” Murray said, but he said organizers should have monitored the situation.
“You’ve got to do better than that,” he said. “This is one of the biggest events of the world. If you have rules like that you’ve got to stick to them.” World number one and defending champion Rafael Nadal was destined to miss the worst of the conditions, but he could look forward to a muggy night on Ashe against Canadian Vasek Pospisil.
Raonic, who advanced 6-3 6-4 6-4 over France’s Gilles Simone, said it was probably one of the few times Nadal would be happy to find himself last on court for the second time in as many matches. “If the weather was normal, I’m sure he would want to play middle of the day,” Raonic said. Greece’s Stefanos Tsitsipas said the heat took a mental as well as physical toll.
“You don’t have fresh air to breathe — you breathe this heat that’s coming, the moisture that’s in the air. So you feel like you are empty,” said the 15th-seed, who was undone by 64 unforced errors in a 6-4 6-3 4-6 6-3 loss to Russian Daniil Medvedev. It was a disappointing end to the tournament for the 20-year-old, who was the highest-seeded US Open debutant since Richard Gasquet played his first US Open as the No. 13 in 2005.
Medvedev, who won his second ATP title of the season at Winston-Salem last week, booked a third-round meeting with 20th-seeded Croatian Borna Coric, a 7-6 (7/4) 6-2 6-3 winner over Spain’s Roberto Carballes Baena.
Fifth-seeded South African Kevin Anderson, runner-up to Nadal last year, made quick work of France’s Jeremy Chardy, 6-2 6-4 6-4. Ninth-seeded Austrian Dominic Thiem, the French Open finalist whose US Open preparation was disrupted by injury and illness, advanced with a 6-7 (5/7) 6-3 5-7 6-4 6-1 victory over American Steve Johnson.