Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement

Tata Open Maharashtra: Bad Start For India As Nagal, 15-year-old Dhamne Go Down Fighting (Ld)

Indian tennis players, Sumit Nagal and the 15-year-old prodigy Manas Dhamne put up gutsy performances but ended up on the losing side in their respective singles opening round matches in the Tata Open Maharashtra ATP Tour event at the Balewadi Stadium here on Monday.

Advertisement
IANS News
By IANS News January 02, 2023 • 23:44 PM
Tata Open Maharashtra: Bad start for India as Nagal, 15-year-old Dhamne go down fighting (Ld)
Tata Open Maharashtra: Bad start for India as Nagal, 15-year-old Dhamne go down fighting (Ld) (Image Source: IANS)

Indian tennis players, Sumit Nagal and the 15-year-old prodigy Manas Dhamne put up gutsy performances but ended up on the losing side in their respective singles opening round matches in the Tata Open Maharashtra ATP Tour event at the Balewadi Stadium here on Monday.

While the 25-year-old Nagal conceded a 4-6, 6-4, 4-6 defeat in a thrilling three-setter against the sixth-seeded Filip Krajinovic, Dhamne impressed on his ATP Tour debut before going down fighting against the World No. 113 Michael Mmoh 2-6, 4-6.

Nagal, a wildcard entrant, recovered well in time after losing the first set against the World No. 54 Serbian player. He looked in good touch as the game progressed and pocketed the second set comfortably to level the scores.

However, Krajinovic, the former World No. 26 who defeated Novak Djokovic in Belgrade in 2010, held his nerve in the decider and managed to tilt the result in his favour despite a stiff challenge from Nagal.

Earlier in the day, the tennis prodigy Dhamne, another wildcard, began confidently by bagging the opening game in the first set.

Playing in front of the home fans, the local boy Dhamne made the former World No. 96, Mmoh work hard for each point

"I was a bit nervous before the match but as I went onto the court and played a few points, I felt good. The first point was really important. It calmed me down and the nervousness went away," Dhamne said after the match.

The American pocketed the first set 6-2 and even carried the momentum in the next by taking a strong 5-1 lead. But, the reigning Asian Junior champion Dhamne refused to give up and fought back hard as he almost took the match into the decider by bagging three successive games to make it 5-4.

However, Mmoh, who has played all four Grand Slams, used all of his experience to secure the match in the end.

"I had a chance, maybe the match could have been different. I am happy with the way I performed. It was a really good experience. I will try to improve when I play the next tournament," Dhamne, who has also been selected for the Grand Slam Player Grant Programme 2023, concluded.

The ongoing edition of South Asia's only ATP 250 event is being conducted by the Maharashtra State Lawn Tennis Association (MSLTA) in association with the Government of Maharashtra for the fifth year in Pune.

Meanwhile, in other Round-of-32 singles matches, Laslo Djere and Tallon Griekspoor produced strong winning shows against the seeded players. While Djere thrashed the No. 5 seed Alex Molcan 6-2, 6-4, Griekspoor beat seventh-seeded Jaume Munar 6-4, 7-5.

Roberto Carballes Baena, Marco Cecchinato and Benjamin Bonzi were others to progress into the second round.

In a doubles Round-of-16 match, Julian Cash and Henry Patten notched up a 7-5, 6-4 win against Diego Hidalgo and Emil Ruusuvuori.

India No. 1 Mukund Sasikumar and Ramkumar Ramanathan will kickstart their challenge in the singles opening round on Tuesday.

Indian doubles star Rohan Bopanna and Ramkumar will also be up against each other in the doubles opening round with their respective partners. Yuki Bhambri-Saketh Myneni and Purav Raja-Divij Sharan are among the other Indians to begin their campaigns on Day 2 of the main draw.

India No. 1 Mukund Sasikumar and Ramkumar Ramanathan will kickstart their challenge in the singles opening round on Tuesday.

Also Read: SA20, 2023 - Squads & Schedule

 

This story has not been edited by Cricketnmore staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed


Advertisement
TAGS
Advertisement