Monday, May 25, 2015

Homegrown Monfils feels no extra French Open pressure

<span id="midArticle_start"/><span id="midArticle_0"/> Former world number seven Gael Monfils is not feeling any extra weight of local expectation at the French Open, despite playing his home grand slam with a highest world ranking since a knee injury in 2012.

<span id="midArticle_1"/>One of four Frenchmen among the top 20 men's seeds at Roland Garros, the rangy Monfils has clawed his way back up the rankings since his injury. Now at 14, he is seen by many in the French sporting press as the country's best hope this year.

<span id="midArticle_2"/>"I appreciate it... but then you just have to go out and win your matches," the 28-year-old said after a wobbly first round win against fellow Frenchman Edouard Roger-Vasselin on Monday in which he had trouble with the wind -- and with his shorts.

<span id="midArticle_3"/>"I don't necessarily feel the pressure.. Jo (Wilfried Tsonga), Richard (Gasquet) and Gilles (Simon) have as much chance as I do."

<span id="midArticle_4"/> <span class="first-article-divide"/>Monfils took Andy Murray to five sets in the quarter-finals last year when he was ranked outside the top 20.

<span id="midArticle_5"/>But his best grand slam performance to date was longer ago, here in front of his home crowd, in 2008, when he lost in four sets in the semi-finals to Roger Federer.

<span id="midArticle_6"/> <span class="second-article-divide"/>The slender 6 foot 4 (192 centimeter) Monfils, a crowd-pleaser famous for his unorthodox shots and basketball player posture, appeared to be cruising against wildcard entry Roger-Vasselin, but then dropped the second set on a tiebreak before gathering himself for a 6-2 6-7(5) 6-1 7-5 victory.

<span id="midArticle_7"/>"I wasn't going at 100 percent... Then he started to manage the (wind) conditions better than me... I had to give it a bit of a boost," Monfils said.

<span id="midArticle_8"/> <span class="third-article-divide"/>Aside from the wind, Monfils also had something of a wardrobe malfunction with a pair of shorts whose pocket was too small to carry a ball for a second serve.

<span id="midArticle_9"/>"It was a bit tricky," he said. "You get into a routine with the ball in your pocket... that second ball... having to turn around (for an extra ball) and then serve again, it took me a while to adapt... I'll have a new pair of shorts for the next match.

<span id="midArticle_10"/>
<span id="midArticle_11"/> (editing by Justin Palmer)

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