Milos Raonic – Canada Fan Blog an (unofficial) blog about tennis and Canadian player Milos Raonic

3May/11Off

Raonic loses to Lopez in Madrid Open

Feliciano Lopez defeated Milos Raonic in the first round of the Mutua Madrid Open, 4-6 7-6(2) 6-3.

Milos Raonic came into Madrid ranked #25 in the world, coming off his semi-final run at the Estoril Open. But his ranking didn't prevent him from being dealt a less than favourable draw, having to face Feliciano Lopez (ESP) in the first round in front of a Spanish audience. And let's not forget who looms largely in the second round... some guy named Roger Federer.

It was clear early on that Raonic's serve was going to make a huge difference in the match. The first serve percentage was very high (in the 70s range), which was much better than we've seen in matches over the last couple of weeks. On top of that, Milos racked up a whopping 11 aces in the first set alone. Those are indoor hardcourt numbers, reminiscent of San Jose and Memphis! Raonic didn't face any break points in the opening set, and only needed to convert one point to break Lopez and take the set in just 30 minutes.

It was the same story in the second. Raonic was serving phenomenally. The aces kept coming, and the first serves were making it difficult for Lopez to work his way into Milos' service games. Lopez won the majority of the points off Raonic's second serve. But there wasn't a break point to be seen throughout most of the set. Serving at 4-5, Raonic hit a benchmark with his 20th ace of the match. On the hardcourts earlier this year, this usually meant that Raonic would end up winning the match behind his dominating serve.

At 5-6, Raonic held at love to forec a tiebreak to decide the second set. Lopez earned a mini-break on Milos' first point, but Raonic recovered nicely and followed that up by hitting an ace. But Lopez rallied, and won the tiebreak 7-2. This one was going the distance.

Lopez kept on rolling, breaking Raonic to open the third set. Raonic got all of his first serves in that game, but Lopez was apparently not phased by this. In his next service game, Raonic was again flawless on his first serves and would hold easily this time around. Milos was unable to get back on serve, however, failing to convert the only break chance he earned against Lopez in the third set. Lopez picked up his game and raised his first serve percentage, riding the single break to a 6-4 win.

The back injury that forced Raonic to retire from his semi-final match at the Estoril Open didn't seem to be bothering him today, as evidenced by the soaring ace count and accurate first serves. Perhaps this had something to do with playing at altitude in Madrid. This was a tight, high quality match from both players who each dropped serve only once. The tiebreak in the second proved to be the difference, and it was a surprise that Milos lost it considering how well he was serving.

I guess we will have to wait a little longer for a Raonic / Federer match. Perhaps they'll meet in a major this year...

But if it's any consolation, Verdasco is out of Madrid as well. He lost to Yen-Hsun Lu (TPE) in straight sets by a narrow margin. Now we're looking forward to see Raonic play doubles with Almagro against Verdasco / Lopez.

-multi

Posted by multiformous

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  1. In Rome Milos will play in the first round versus Verdasco.

  2. For what its worth Lopez just lost to Federer 7-6, 6-7,7-6. Considering how close Milos was, its still a good indication of how well he is playing.

    • that was a hell of a match. I can’t believe Lopez missed that overhead in the third set tiebreak! but yes, Milos ran up against an in-form Lopez and played really well. can’t wait for Rome!

  3. He rarely goes down easy, I will say that much for him. Little disappointed in his recent tiebreak record, and I have noticed he tends to suffer a little lull after losing one and gives up a break. Happens to a lot of players.

  4. #Raonic loses to #Lopez in #MadridOpen « Milos Raonic – Canada Fan Blog http://t.co/ljBEV9f via @AddThis #TeamRaonic

  5. This time I have to say that Milos, who is this week n. 25 ATP, has to win matches with other players like Lopez (39ATP).

    • I totally agree, but Lopez is no slouch. he’s been around for a while and knows how to play on clay, and Lopez has been ranked as high as #20 previously.


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