Published
on April 08, 2006
Courtesy
: The Nation
By Lerpong Amsa-ngiam
Thailand raced to a 2-0 lead as Paradorn Srichaphan
and Danai Udomchoke overcome the heat and won the first two
rubbers in the Davis Cup Zone Asia/Oceania Qualifying Group
I second-round tie at the Rama Gardens Hotel yesterday.
In front of 1,000 noisy fans and the sound of cymbals and
drums, Paradorn lived up to the expectations of the crowd
by producing superb tennis to subdue Japan's Gouichi Motomura
6-4 7-6 (7-4) 6-1 in two hours and 15 minutes.
But in a more exhilarating contest, Thai No-2 Danai Udomchoke
gritted his teeth to claw back from two sets to one down to
edge out the inspired Go Soeda 7-5 3-6 6-7 (4-7) 6-4 6-3 after
four hours and 30 minutes. Upon hitting the winning point,
an exhausted Danai collapsed on court and lay there for awhile.
"It was unbelievable to win this match. I didn't win
just because of my ability but also by a miracle. I would
like to dedicate this win to His Majesty the King,'' Danai
said.
Temperatures had soared up to 39 degrees in the Paradorn-Motomura
match but the Thai No-1 didn't falter. "It was a relief
to win the first rubber because the weather was so hot out
there. Luckily I am quite fit now,'' said Paradorn who now
stands 4-3 in previous meetings against the 473rd-ranked Motomura.
Despite being used to the scorching heat, Paradorn admitted
he had difficulties with it for a while.
"It was so hot during the first 15 minutes I wondered
if I would be able to survive in these conditions. I was lucky
to be able to win the second set, because I was pretty sure
that with a 2-0 lead I could wrap up the match,'' added Paradorn
Thai captain Thanakorn Srichaphan said he knew that the tie
with Japan wouldn't be easy.
"We achieved our target by winning the first two matches.
I expected a tough fight from Japan because their players
are some of the strongest in Asia," said Thanakorn, who
was confident Thailand would win the doubles today.
Despite his low ranking at only 473, Motomura played well
against the hard-hitting Paradorn in the early stages of the
match. However Paradorn's superior ground strokes brought
a break with a forehand winner at 4-3. He hammered three aces
to finish the first set 6-4.
The two players held their serves in the second set, taking
it to a tie-break. Paradorn's consistency was the deciding
factor, taking the tie-break with one of his 16 aces on the
day to wrap up the set.
Due to the heat, the players were permitted to have a 15-minute
break before the third set. When play resumed Paradorn maintained
his composure whereas Motomura faded away quickly and could
win only one game. Danai won a seesaw battle in the first
set 7-5 before losing the second 3-6.
The atmosphere became more thrilling as the two fought out
long gruelling rallies in the third set. Soeda, after blowing
two previous set points at 5-4, played very solidly to take
the set 7-6 (7-4).
Danai clawed his way into the game by taking the fourth set
6-4 and proved the stronger in the decider, winning 6-3 thanks
to a crucial break in the ninth game Today, Sonchat and Sanchai
Ratiwatana face Satoshi Iwabuchi and Toshihide Matsui at 2pm,
in a match that will be televised on UCB SuperSport.
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