New sensations Stefanos Tsitsipas and Alexander Zverev both had a bad day in Germany as they had to concede loss against underdogs, reports Reuters.
Greek world number six Stefanos Tsitsipas’ Wimbledon preparations suffered a blow on Thursday when he crashed to a 6-4 3-6 6-4 defeat against Chilean Nicolas Jarry in the second round of the Libema Open in Rosmalen.
Top seed Tsitsipas, who received a bye in the opening round, landed just 59 percent of his first serves and was broken twice in a sluggish display to hand the 60th-ranked Jarry victory in two hours.
Tsitsipas was playing his first match since losing to Stan Wawrinka in the last last-16 of the French Ope.
The 20-year-old will look to improve on last year’s fourth-round appearance at Wimbledon when he returns to the All England Club next month.
Jarry will meet either Kazakh Mikhail Kukushkin or France’s Richard Gasquet in Friday’s quarter-finals.
On the other hand, top seed Alexander Zverev crashed out in the second round of the Stuttgart Open on Thursday, losing 6-4 6-7(3) 6-3 to world number 170 Dustin Brown.
Zverev struggled with his fellow German’s chip and charge game in the first grasscourt tournament of the season ahead of Wimbledon.
A French open quarter-finalist, Zverev, saved four set points on his serve at 5-3 in the first but could do nothing to stop the 34-year-old Brown from serving out the first set a game later.
The world number five, who has never won a title on grass, improved in the second and quickly broke in the second game to race 5-2 clear.
Yet Brown continued to mix it up and broke back to level at 6-6 before his opponent, who served 14 double faults, clinched the second set 7-3 in the tiebreak.
Brown saved three break points at 3-3 in the third and never looked back, racing to finish it on his first match point.
“It’s a big win. The last few years have been a bit up and down with injuries. So I am very happy and especially that it happened in three sets which was mentally very challenging,” said Brown.
“I stayed cool, tried to play deep and am happy to have won it.”
He will now play Canadian teenager Felix Auger-Aliassime in the last eight after the seventh seed beat France’s Gilles Simon in straight sets.