Former world no. 4 Blake, who announced on Monday that he would retire after this tournament, followed Venus on to the Armstrong Stadium and after one hour, it seemed like he was on his way to a second round showdown the ninth seed Stanislas Wawrinka after going up two-sets-to-love.
But his opponent, the 6ft 10 inches Ivo Karlovic has a cannonball of a serve (he had 38 aces in all) which can get him out of any situation. On Wednesday too, Karlovic used his serve to level the match at two sets all and went up a break to lead 4-2 in the decider.
But Blake was not done yet. He broke the Croat’s serve for 4-4 and then took the match to a tiebreaker. Once there, Blake’s inconsistency returned as he made several unforced errors and Karlovic went on to win the tiebreaker 7-2 after nearly 3 hours and 25minutes.
At 34, Karlovic is a few months older than Blake and has also had his share of health issues. He was in the hospital earlier this year due to viral meningitis but has come back strong in recent weeks. This was only Blake’s second first round loss at Flushing Meadows, the first coming on his debut here in 1999, and he will also play in the doubles draw tomorrow.
One sentimental favourite did win on Wednesday though. The 32-year-old former world no. 1 Lleyton Hewitt was too consistent for American Brian Baker, winning in four sets and setting up a showdown with sixth seed Juan Martin del Potro, who needed more than four hours to beat Spaniard Guillermo Garcia Lopez. Hewitt and del Potro are both former champions here – the Australian won here in 2001 while del Potro won in 2009.
Defending men’s champion Andy Murray played his first round match on Wednesday. The Scot was not happy to get his title defence to such a late start but managed to beat the quirky French veteran Michael Llodra in straight sets in a fun match that saw Llodra hit a between-the-legs volley a well as an underarm serve.
On the women’s side, several second round matches, including that of top seed Serena Williams, were cancelled due to rain, but third seed Agnieszka Radwanska, fifth seed Li Na and 16th seeded Sloane Stephens all managed to win in straight sets. Lower down the ranks, three men’s seeds crashed out. No. 16 Fabio Fognini and no. 29 Jurgen Melzer were beaten in straight sets while 24th seed Benoit Paire lost in a fifth set tie-breaker.
And for Indian fans, there was good news as well as Somdev Devvarman beat 84th ranked Lukas Lacko 4-6, 6-1, 6-2, 4-6, 6-4 in 3 hours and 11 minutes to set up a meeting with 20th seeded Andreas Seppi in the second round. The win assures Devvarman of 70 ranking points which will see him return to the top 100 in the world next week.
Quote of the Day - Tim Smyczek, on being asked his reaction to his transport car running out of gas on his way to the tournament site, said, “My coach and I just started laughing. I felt bad for the lady because she knew she s*****d up. But there was nothing you could do but laugh. Thankfully I gave myself enough time this morning that I wasn’t too worried about, you know, missing my match or anything, so… saw a good photo op and we took it.”
Matches to look forward on Day 4 –
(8) Angelique Kerber vs. Eugenie Bouchard; (9) Jelena Jankovic vs. Alisa Kleybanova (13) John Isner vs. Gael Monfils
Venus Williams and Father Richard recall one match that 7-time Grand Slam champion "should have won"