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Thiem bags Lyon title

May 26, 2018
Dominic Thiem
Dominic Thiem

LYON — Dominic Thiem warmed up for the French Open by winning the Lyon Open title Saturday with a gritty 3-6, 7-6(1), 6-1 victory over French veteran Gilles Simon in the final.

The 24-year-old was staring at defeat while down a set and a break but dug deep to prevail in two hours 24 minutes for his 200th tour match victory and his 10th ATP title.

"I'm super happy. I fought really hard for this title," Thiem said. "I'm really happy that I won. It's always something special. It's my tenth title, which is a great number. I have a little 'decima', I think."

Thiem has eight claycourt titles in his career and is seen as one of the few players capable of denying world No. 1 Rafa Nadal a record-extending 11th title at Roland Garros.

The Austrian snapped Nadal's year-long winning streak of 50 consecutive sets when he beat the Spaniard in the Madrid Open quarterfinals earlier this month.

His tenacity and endurance will serve him well at the claycourt grand slam that begins Sunday.

Thiem was forced to play twice Friday, coming through a three-setter in the semifinal against Dusan Lajovic after earlier completing his quarterfinal against Guillermo Garcia-Lopez which had been suspended due to fading light the previous day.

The long hours on court appeared to tell as Thiem tamely capitulated the first set Saturday but he found a way back into the match and did not look back.

Thiem, twice a semifinalist at the French Open, will have a day's break before he begins his campaign at Roland Garros with a first-round match against unseeded Belarussian Ilya Ivashka.

"France has a very special place in my heart. I've always played great tennis here and I hope I will always play great tennis here," Thiem added.

Fucsovics wins

first ATP title

Marton Fucsovics won the Geneva Open on Saturday, becoming the first Hungarian to claim an ATP title for 36 years.

Fucsovics, 26, beat Germany's Peter Gojowczyk 6-2, 6-2 to set himself up for his first-round match at the French Open against Canadian player Vasek Pospisil, who at 80 is ranked 20 places below him.

The Hungarian had claimed the scalp of Grand Slam winner Stan Wawrinka in the quarterfinals in Geneva.

The last Hungarian winner of an ATP title was Balazs Taroczy, who won at Hilversum in the Netherlands in 1982. — Agencies


May 26, 2018
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