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Davydenko finally beats Ljubicic again - Robredo wins

Other News Materials 13 May 2008 21:39 (UTC +04:00)

Nikolay Davydenko beat Ivan Ljubicic for the first time in four years on Tuesday, 6-4, 6- 1, in the second round of the Hamburg Masters, dpa reported.

The fourth-seeded Russian Davydenko took 1 hour 24 minutes to prevail over Croatia's Ljubicic, a former top-three player who now ranks 29th.

Davydenko won the first two matches with Ljubicic in 2003 and 2004, but lost the next three in the past four years. The series now stands at 3-3.

"The first match is always difficult," said Davydenko.

The Russian faced stiff resistance in the first set which saw five breaks of serve. Davydenko then controlled the action in the second, winning on a forehand Ljubicic hit wide. Davydenko had 13 unforced errors to Ljubicic's 31.

Davydenko said his confidence was rattled when he lost to Spain's Tommy Robredo in the third round in Rome last week, but he is overall more stable than in the past - boosted by his Miami Masters title in April.

"My tennis is still the same, but I am better mentally," he said.

Fernando Verdasco also reached the third round, 6-2, 6-0 against Michael Llodra of France. He next runs into five seed David Ferrer for a Spanish duel as Ferrer routed Czech Ivo Minar, 6-3, 6-3.

The 2006 champion Tommy Robredo made the second round, the Spanish 13 seed rallying to beat Germany's Philipp Kohlschreiber 2-6, 7-6 (7-5), 6- 3, in 2 hours 30 minutes - with a little help from the chair umpire.

Umpire Gerry Armstrong ruled a ball from Robredo in which the linesman saw out. TV replays showed the ball was out for what would have given Kohlschreiber a possibly deciding break for 4- 2 in the second set.

There was more joy for Spain over France when Carlos Moya fought from 5-3 down in the final set to beat Michael Llodra, 3-6, 6-4, 7-6 (9-7), in the first round.

Two more players retired during first round games for a tournament total of three.

Belgium's Kristof Vliegen quit against Jose Acasuso with a back problem and Luis Horna of Peru likely damaged his calf muscle against Potito Starace of Italy. Filippo Volandri of Italy retired Monday with a knee injury.

Retirements have plagued tournaments in recent weeks, with world number three Novak Djokovic for instance not having to complete his quarter- and semi-final en route to the Rome title.

"What happened in Rome did not happen for no reason. One reason is the tight schedule. We need to talk about that more in the future," said the Serb on Monday after arriving in Hamburg.

Djokovic, who is the hottest player in 2008, has a first-round bye like the world-leading duo of Swiss Roger Federer (a four-time Hamburg champion) and Spain's Rafael Nadal. They start play in Hamburg on Wednesday.

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