Top seed Sam Querrey upset by Dustin Brown, extending Hall of Fame’s fate of top seeds

By AP
Wednesday, July 7, 2010

Top seed Querrey upset by Jamaican Dustin Brown

NEWPORT, R.I. — Top seed Sam Querrey was upset in the second round of the Hall of Fame Tennis Championships on Wednesday, extending the No. 1 seed’s run of never winning the title in the 34 years of the tournament.

Querrey, ranked 19th entering the week and a three-time winner on the tour this season, was beaten 6-4, 6-3 in 47 minutes.

Dustin Brown won 33 of 34 of his first-serve points. It’s his first win over a top 20 player.

Brown, ranked in the 400s a year ago, relied on a quick pace and big serve to frustrate the top American in the tournament. He had 14 aces.

“Half the time I was walking over to the other side and the ball was in the air for him to serve,” Querrey said of Brown’s fast approach.

The 25-year old Jamaican took control by breaking Querrey to go up 3-2 in the fifth game of the second set, winning with a well-placed drop shot at the net.

“I wasn’t expecting to break him. I knew I was serving well,” Brown said. “When I broke him, I just wanted to continue to serve well. Everything just struck together for me. It’s going to take a while to sink in.”

Both players held serve and Brown led 4-3 at the changeover. He didn’t sit during the break, came back out and closed the eighth game with three straight aces.

Querrey seemed surprised by Brown’s different style grip and his ability to beat him with cuts and slices. The match ended when Querrey hit a forehand return into the net after Brown moved to match point with a backhand passing shot down the sideline.

Querrey won in Memphis, Belgrade and at Queen’s Club so far this season. Last year, he was the first American in five years to advance to three straight finals, including a runner-up in Newport. He won the Los Angeles Open and was runner-up at Pilot Pen.

“He’s a very unorthodox player,” Querrey said. “You don’t see that often. Kudos to him.”

Brown entered the week ranked 108.

In other action, No. 5 seed Mardy Fish advanced to the quaterfinals by defeating Somdev Dewarman, 6-2, 6-0, in 66 minutes. Fish needed just 51 minutes to advance on Tuesday.

“You know what to expect when you come here because they’re more soft than the courts over in London,” Fish said of Newport’s grass courts. “They’re sort of like first-strike tennis. I feel like that suits my style.”

Nicolas Mahut, who advanced Tuesday in his first match after losing to John Isner at Wimbledon in the longest match in tennis history — 11-hours, 5-minutes — lost to Frank Dancevic, 7-6 (5), 6-3. Defending champ Rajeev Ram was ousted by Raven Klaasen, 5-7, 6-1, 7-6 (3).

Mahut said he’s going to rest for a few weeks after his 1-hour, 16-minute loss.

“I have to. I can’t play in this shape. I have to take two weeks off to see how my body heals,” he said. “Today my lower back, my foot and my knee were really bothering me. I tried. I tried. I kept fighting. After Wimbledon I got here and was feeling great. I don’t know why.”

Brian Dabul also advanced, beating Go Soeda 7-5, 6-2.

YOUR VIEW POINT
NAME : (REQUIRED)
MAIL : (REQUIRED)
will not be displayed
WEBSITE : (OPTIONAL)
YOUR
COMMENT :