Sixth-seeded Andy Roddick loses to Gael Monfils in 4th round of French Open

By AP
Monday, June 1, 2009

Roddick loses to Monfils in 4th round of French

PARIS — Andy Roddick’s best showing at the French Open ended with a lopsided loss in fading light.

Which bothered him more Monday, that he played poorly in a 6-4, 6-2, 6-3 fourth-round exit against 11th-seeded Gael Monfils of France — or that the match continued as dusk descended?

“Obviously they’re both frustrating, and both contributed to my frustration,” said Roddick, the last U.S. man in the tournament. “He handled the conditions better than I did.”

The match was the last of the day on Court Suzanne Lenglen, and play didn’t begin until 7:47 p.m. Roddick began complaining to chair umpire Enric Molina in the second set that it was too dark.

After losing that set, Roddick told Molina: “I’m having trouble seeing the ball. I can’t see the ball.”

Roddick, never before past the third round at Roland Garros, missed several volleys and at least one overhead shot. After one miscue, the partisan crowd roared, and Monfils egged the spectators on, waving his hands as if to say, “Get louder!”

“The crowd did a good job supporting me. At times, I asked them to wake up and try to bury Andy. They responded, and I think he was a bit annoyed,” said Monfils, who’ll play Roger Federer in the quarterfinals. “As for Andy, I apologize for that.”

Roddick didn’t complain.

“It’s certainly his right,” the 2003 U.S. Open champion said. “It’s his advantage to use.”

While bemoaning his own play — “I felt like I made the right decisions and just messed up the execution,” Roddick said — he also heaped praise on Monfils, calling him one of the best athletes to ever play tennis.

“He covers so much ground,” Roddick said.

The Frenchman finished with a 45-18 edge in winners and a 17-4 advantage in aces. Monfils also saved nine of the 10 break points he faced.

“He served really big,” Roddick acknowledged, “and he served really big at the right times.”

SCHOOL VACATION: Sorana Cirstea is having one heck of a spring break.

The 19-year-old high school student from Romania made her way into the quarterfinals of the French Open on Monday by surprising fifth-seeded Jelena Jankovic 6-3, 0-6, 9-7.

“I always kept going to a normal school and normal class and the teachers, when I’m not there, they know I’m in tournaments,” said Cirstea, who plans to finish her studies this year. “Now they can see me on TV. They know I’m not somewhere else.”

Cirstea, the youngest quarterfinalist at Roland Garros, faces 25-year-old Samantha Stosur next. Neither has ever played in a Grand Slam quarterfinal.

Cirstea is the first Romanian woman to make it this far at any major tournament since Irina Spirlea reached the 1997 U.S. Open semifinals. Stosur is the first Australian woman to reach the French Open quarterfinals since Nicole Provis made the 1988 semifinals.

“I want to try and get even further,” Stosur said.

AP Sports Writer Chris Lehourites contributed to this report.

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