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glamour-gal
May 26th, 2004, 06:05 AM
Clement, Santoro make history
By Georges Homsi
Tuesday, May 25, 2004

Unseeded Frenchman Fabrice Santoro progressed to the second round of the French Open on Tuesday with a 6-4 6-3 6-7(4) 3-6 16-14 win over compatriot Arnaud Clément (No32). Above and beyond the name of the bare stats, the record books will recall that the two men disputed the longest match ever in the professional era, an epic battle that lasted six hours, 33 minutes, over two days.

Suzanne Lenglen Court was the stage for an encounter that will live long in the memory. The match had been interrupted due to fading light at 9.30pm yesterday evening with the score at 5-5. At that point the two had been on court for four hours, 38 minutes and Santoro had already been forced to save a match point. When the two players re-emerged blinking in the bright sunshine this morning, few could have imagined they would fight on, toe to toe, for another hour and 54 minutes, in the process breaking the record for the longest match ever in the Open era.

Both men held serve with impressive regularity this morning, and it was not until the 23rd game that Santoro earned the first break of the day. Refusing to lie down and die, Clément replied with a superb game and the two were back at 12-12.

Double record

Later, at 14-13, it was Clément’s turn to get a second match point, some 20 hours after the one he squandered last night. The man from Aix en Provence should have won it too, but with the court wide open, he sent the ball into the net. ‘Battling Fab’ was back in with a chance, and he took it admirably, storming the net to break for a 15-14 lead.

Would Clément finally give up? Far from it. Three clean winners took him to 0-40. Only then did he crack, hitting three unforced errors to let Santoro back into the game at deuce. Santoro then went for it on his serve, smashing down an ace to earn his first match point. A magnificent backhand pass down the line was then a fitting, glorious way to clinch victory. ‘La Clé’ had lost for the third time in four appearances at Roland Garros after holding a match point. The No32 seed left the court to a standing ovation, while Santoro burst into tears, overcome by joy and nervous exhaustion. The unfancied outsider had just won the match of his life.

This marathon beats the previous longest match in the Open era, which stretches back to 1968. That was a McEnroe-Wilander Davis Cup quarter final that lasted six hours, 22 minutes back in 1982. The longest match at Roland Garros had previously been the Corretja-Gumy encounter from 1998 which was ‘only’ five hours, 31 minutes long. The Santoro-Clément match also equals the record for the match with the most games at ‘Roland’ - 71, the same number as the Agenor-Prinosil duel in 1994 (6-7 6-7 6-3 6-4 14-12) to the player from Haiti.


:blueeek:

muffins
May 27th, 2004, 02:54 AM
Wow! Those players must have been tired and that's an understatement! I remember when Andy went 5 hours with El Aynaiou but I get the impression that clay is even more tiring! I wonder if anyone will ever beat that.

Hantuchova Fan
May 27th, 2004, 12:09 PM
Fabrice santoro came back the next day to win another 5 setter match so he's into the 3rd round now

glamour-gal
May 28th, 2004, 09:50 AM
Wow! Those players must have been tired and that's an understatement! I remember when Andy went 5 hours with El Aynaiou but I get the impression that clay is even more tiring! I wonder if anyone will ever beat that.



yeah, i remember this match as well - of course! :sunny:

maybe in a couple of years it will be beaten? who knows...........

glamour-gal
May 28th, 2004, 09:51 AM
Fabrice santoro came back the next day to win another 5 setter match so he's into the 3rd round now



santoro must be really fit then!!! :)

Hantuchova Fan
May 28th, 2004, 01:22 PM
well today he lost, but what can you expect?

glamour-gal
May 29th, 2004, 01:02 AM
i guess he was just too exhausted, of course.....

muffins
May 30th, 2004, 12:36 PM
The French Open seems to be throwing up a lot of epic matches. Malisse went 5 sets with Costa and Henman won 9-7 in the fifth today to progress to the quarter finals for the first time of his career in any grand slam other than Wimbledon.