The day started off badly for Thailand as Danai Udomchoke
blew away three match points against Takao Suzuki and lost
the first rubber. The Thai No 2 had a 2-1 set lead and was
on top at 5-4 in the fourth set over the Japanese No 1.
Summoning inexhaustible energy and playing serve and volley,
the Japanese, with his back to the wall, turned the situation
around to win the match 6-7 (5-7) 6-4 1-6 7-5 6-4 in three
hours and 37 minutes.
Paradorn saved the day for the Kingdom by overpowering veteran
Motomura with his explosive serves and heavy groundstrokes
to win 6-4 7-6 (7-1) 6-4 in two hours and five minutes. The
Japanese 30-year-old, who was made to run hither and thither,
collapsed a few times and developed cramps in the third set
chasing the ball from the Thai.
“I’m quite happy to have played well in my first match since
Wimbledon. It was good tennis, and it was quite entertaining
for the fans,” said Paradorn, who has the heavy task of winning
the rubber against Suzuki tomorrow.
“This surface suits his game. I expect a tough match against
him, because he has a lot of energy and will try hard with
the crowd behind him. I just have to keep the first-serve
percentage high, return well and pin him to the baseline,”
said Paradorn, adding that he always played well in Japan
because he felt perfectly at home.
Danai was in great form and did nothing wrong. In fact Suzuki
brought out his best, and Danai found his serve-and-volley
game hard to tackle.
“I’m sorry. It must be tough for the fans back home. I just
could not win the match when I had three match points. He
served so well, and I could do nothing. I tried my best,”
said a disheartened Danai.
“I tried hard to forget that I had match points, but I could
not stop thinking about it. Suzuki hit many unbelievable drop
volleys, and all credit to him for that,” said Danai, who
applauded his rival after one such amazing volley.
The 29-year-old Suzuki thanked the 1,000-strong fans for
rooting for him when he was on the threshold of defeat.
“The crowd really pushed me to play my best out here. I was
surprised that I won the match. I tried slicing the balls,
volleyed and moved to the net when Danai gave me short balls,”
said the 169th-ranked Suzuki.
Danai and Suzuki proved highly solid in their service games
as they extended the first set to a tie-break. Danai had three
set points but needed the third one to land the set in controversial
circumstances. A lineman called a serve fault and then corrected
it, which earned the Thai the set 7-6 (7-5) while Suzuki disagreed
and protested to the chair umpire.
The Thai played a loose game at 4-5 in the second set, which
gave the Japanese triple set points at 0-40. Suzuki won the
set 6-4 with a brilliant smash.
Danai was unstoppable in the third set, hitting a series
of brilliant passing shots to unsettle Suzuki, and won the
third set 6-1 in just 25 minutes. He continued his rich vein
of form into the fourth set, passing the Japanese with a forehand
winner to break for 4-2, and then served an ace to go up 5-2.
He reached his first two match points at 5-4 and 40-15, but
Suzuki fired well-placed serves to stave off defeat and saved
the third match point with an overhead smash. Pumping himself
up, Suzuki stuck to his game plan by pressuring at the net.
His stinging volleys and sharp serves gave him the set at
7-5, which brought the fans to life.
Danai appeared to have a problem with his back as an inspired
Suzuki attacked him at the neet. The Japanese managed a break
in the third game, which was enough to gain victory.