OTHER

The Latest: Japan’s Nishikori starts well at French Open

May 24, 2015, 8:54 AM

Japan’s Kei Nishikori returns the ball to France’s Paul-Henri Mathieu during their firs...

Japan's Kei Nishikori returns the ball to France's Paul-Henri Mathieu during their first round match of the French Open tennis tournament at the Roland Garros stadium, Sunday, May 24, 2015 in Paris, (AP Photo/Christophe Ena)

(AP Photo/Christophe Ena)

PARIS (AP) — 5:39 p.m.

Japan’s fifth-seeded Kei Nishikori is off to a better start than at the 2014 French Open, easing through 6-3, 7-5, 6-1 against French wild card Paul-Henri Mathieu.

Carrying an injury, Nishikori disappointed with a first-round exit at the French last year but rebounded by making the U.S. Open final.

Winning a high 79 percent of points on his first serve and hammering down seven aces, Nishikori took 2 hours, 10 minutes to brush Mathieu off the Court Suzanne Lenglen.

Japan started with five men in the French main draw, the most since 1967, when there were six, and the most at any major since Wimbledon in 1973.

Go Soeda’s 6-1, 6-0, 6-2 first-round loss to Philipp Kohlschreiber quickly reduced their ranks to four.

____

5:04 p.m.

Roger Federer isn’t the only Swiss unhappy with French Open organizers.

Stan Wawrinka is complaining about a “completely stupid article” that he says appeared on the official www.rolandgarros.com tournament website.

Federer’s Davis Cup teammate said he spotted the article Saturday and “I told the tournament that I wasn’t really happy about it.”

The article, which seemingly touched on his private life, has since been taken down.

“It’s the official website of a Grand Slam, so I hope the guy who did that article is not a journalist,” Wawrinka said. “I also hope the guy who is supposed to check all the articles on the website is not working anymore for the tournament.”

The eighth-seeded Wawrinka eased into the second round with a 6-3, 6-2, 6-3 victory Sunday against 82nd-ranked Marsel Ilhan.

____

4:25 p.m.

Roger Federer is fuming that a kid got on center court to snap selfies with him at the French Open and is demanding better security.

“This should never happen on the Philippe Chatrier court,” the 2009 French Open champion said. “I’m not happy about it. Obviously not one second I’m happy about it.”

The normally calm Swiss says tournament director Gilbert Ysern quickly apologized. Ysern was also seen speaking to Federer’s wife in the players’ lounge.

The teenage-looking boy ran onto the clay court, put a hand on the 17-time Grand Slam champion’s shoulder and tried to snap photos of them together with his mobile phone. This was as Federer was walking off court from his first-round victory.

“It’s true for all players that you have to feel safe when we play, feel safe on the courts,” Federer said. “It shouldn’t happen too often. It’s happened twice in two days.”

He said several kids also approached him Saturday during practice: “There was one who arrived and then followed by five kids. Nobody reacted in terms of safety, you know, security.”

He spoke scathingly of security guards who took several seconds Sunday to react, with one of them eventually steering the boy away.

“You know, it’s not just being there, standing there on the courts wearing a nice tie and suit. It’s not that funny, you know,” he said. “I hope that there is going to be a reaction from the tournament.”

____

3:44 p.m.

A selfie-seeking fan’s up-close-and-personal approach of Roger Federer on center court at the French Open raises new questions about player security, an ever-present concern in tennis since the stabbing of Monica Seles in 1993.

Seles was a teenager and ranked No. 1 when obsessed fan Guenter Parche plunged a kitchen knife into her back as she sat on a bench during a changeover at a tournament in Hamburg, Germany.

Parche said he didn’t want to kill Seles, only disable her long enough for German rival Steffi Graf to regain the No. 1 ranking. Graf soon assumed the top ranking.

The attack put Seles out of competition for over two years.

Sunday’s incident wasn’t Federer’s first encounter with a French Open intruder. During the second set of the 2009 final, a man jumped over the photographer’s pit, went right up to Swiss and tried to put a red hat on him. Federer brushed him aside before security guards got close enough to intervene. After hopping the net, the man was tackled and jailed for questioning.

No comment yet from tournament organizers on the latest incident.

____

3:30 p.m.

Ivo Karlovic is the first seeded man to exit from the French Open. The big server, seeded 25th, hit 21 aces in losing 7-6 (5), 6-4, 6-4 to Marcos Baghdatis on Court 7.

Baghdatis, runner-up at the 2006 Australian Open, next plays Damir Dzumhir in the second round.

____

3:10 p.m.

Surely, this was pushing the selfie craze too far.

A kid ran down from the stands and across center court at Roland Garros to get a selfie with Roger Federer after the 17-time Grand Slam champion’s first-round victory against Alejandro Falla.

The boy, as casual as can be, put his hand across Federer’s shoulder as the tennis great was walking off court with his kit bag, and tried to snap several shots of the two of them together with his mobile phone.

Clearly very uncomfortable, the 2009 champion gently rebuffed the boy, stepped back and glanced over questioningly at security guards for help. After a delay of several seconds, one of them grasped the boy around the waist and steered him away.

The kid then went back the way he came, strolling back across court to the seats.

____

2:43 p.m.

Roger Federer is beaming after his straightforward 6-3, 6-3, 6-4 first-round win against Alejandro Falla, a Colombian who entered the main draw as a lucky loser from qualifying.

Facing a player who pushed him to five sets at Wimbledon five years ago, the 2009 Roland Garros champion was never threatened, extending his unbeaten run against the 111th-ranked Falla to 8-0, serving eight aces.

“I love coming here,” Federer said. “I wasn’t broken. I’m happy.”

In the third set, Falla called for a medical timeout, getting some deep massage on his right thigh.

Sticking out like a sore thumb in ultra-pink shorts (is that color even legal?), Federer paced around the court to stay limber during the break.

Falla lost the last two games and the match.

____

2:01 p.m.

Once bitten, twice shy. Third-seeded Simona Halep, the losing women’s French Open finalist last year, has good reason to be wary of her next opponent, Mirjana Lucic-Baroni. The 70th-ranked Croatian beat Halep in straight sets in the U.S. Open third round last year.

“I have not good memories from that match,” Halep recalled after her first-round 7-5, 6-4 victory on Sunday at Roland Garros against Evgenia Rodina. “I just was blocked and I couldn’t hit the ball.”

Lucic-Baroni advanced to the second round by beating Lauren Davis, a 64th-ranked American, 6-3, 3-6, 6-3.

____

12:45 p.m.

Last year’s losing women’s finalist, Simona Halep, is safely through to the second round, closing out a 7-5, 6-4 victory against Russian Evegenia Rodina with an ace.

The third-seeded Romanian, dressed all in black, celebrated with a fist pump.

Roger Federer is up next on center court. The winner of a record 17 Grand Slam titles got a standing ovation as he stepped onto Court Philippe Chatrier, acknowledging the applause, shrieks and whistles with a quick wave of his right hand.

Federer is wearing an outfit Andre Agassi would approve of: day-glo pink shorts with purple stripes down the sides and a purple shirt.

His first-round opponent is Alejandro Falla. The Colombian, into the main draw as a lucky loser, pushed Federer to five sets in the first round at Wimbledon in 2010.

____

12:19 p.m.

The first match-winner this year is Bosnian Damir Dzumhur, in the men’s draw. He was up two sets against Mikhail Youzhny when the Russian retired at the start of the third. Youzhny was a quarterfinalist in 2010.

On the women’s side, the first winner is Teliana Pereira. The Brazilian qualifier chomped through Fiona Ferro, a 326th-ranked French wild card, in 65 minutes, winning 6-3, 6-2.

____

11:57 a.m.

Out on Court 2, Philipp Kohlschreiber, seeded 22nd, has torn through his first set against Japan’s Go Soeda, winning 6-1. Kohlschreiber (aged 31) and Soeda (30) are among 39 men aged 30 or over in the Roland Garros main draw. That is a Grand Slam record.

Another veteran, 32-year-old Mikhail Youzhny, is off to a bad start on Court 6, losing his first set 6-2 against Bosnian Damir Dzumhur.

The most golden of oldies, 33-year-old Roger Federer, follows Simona Halep on center court. Last year’s losing women’s finalist is up against Evgenia Rodina, winning the first set 7-5.

____

10:52 a.m.

Here we go again. On a sunny Sunday morning, play is about to start at the French Open, as grounds crews finish watering the center court.

The weather forecasts are excellent, with temperatures expected to reach 22 degrees Celsius (72 F) in the afternoon.

Last year’s runner-up Simona Halep will open play on Center Court. The third-seeded Romanian player is taking on Russian Evgenia Rodina before Roger Federer starts his bid for an 18th Grand Slam title against lucky loser Alejandro Falla.

Copyright © The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Other

Associated Press

Royals rally on Murphy’s error, beat Mets, lead Series 3-1

The Kansas City Royals keep finding new ways to win this October. And now with one more victory in November, they will be World Series champions.

9 years ago

...

Associated Press

Shock beat Mercury in final regular-season game before move

Rookie Brianna Kiesel scored a career-best 28 points to help the Shock beat the Phoenix Mercury 91-87 Sunday in the team's final regular-season home game before the franchise moves to Dallas next year.

9 years ago

Follow @AZSports...

Arizona Sports

Fox Sports’ Mike Pereira wants high school football team suspended for vicious hit on official

If Fox Sports NFL rules anyalist Mike Pereira had his way, a high school football team in Texas would forfit its season for the conduct of two its players on a game official Friday.

9 years ago

Calais Campbell (93) is wrapped up by guard Mike Iupati after coming down with an interception duri...

Adam Green

Notes from the Nest: Arizona Cardinals training camp – Aug. 4

Tuesday's afternoon practice had a different feel to it because Carson Palmer did not participate.

9 years ago

Arizona Sports

Mardy Fish handed first-round loss to Dudi Sela in Atlanta

The first stop of Mardy Fish's farewell tour ended quickly with a 6-4, 6-4 first-round loss to Dudi Sela in the Atlanta Open on Tuesday night.

9 years ago

UEFA President Michel Platini watches the preliminary draw for the 2018 soccer World Cup in Konstan...

Arizona Sports

AP Sources: Michel Platini will run for FIFA president

Michel Platini will run for FIFA president and plans to announce his intentions this week.

9 years ago

The Latest: Japan’s Nishikori starts well at French Open