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French Open 2018: Petra Kvitova battles hard to beat Veronica Cepede Royg in first round

Tom Adams

Updated 28/05/2018 at 18:45 GMT

Eighth seed Petra Kvitova survived a scare to beat world number 87 Veronica Cepede Royg 3-6 6-1 7-5 in the first round of the 2018 French Open.

Petra Kvitova of Czech Republic reacts during the ladies singles first round match against Veronica Cepede Royg

Image credit: Getty Images

The Czech, who suffered career-threatening injuries on her playing left hand after being attacked in her home by a knife-wielding intruder in December 2016, arrived in Paris on the back of an 11-match winning streak.
But Cepede Royg came close to snapping that run as she edged 5-4 and 0-15 ahead on Kvitova's serve in the third set.
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Kvitova: I didn't expect it to go over two hours!

But the woman who proved even her surgeon wrong by coming back to play top left tennis just five months after the attack unleashed three successive aces to survive that scare.
She was soon saluting the crowd with a raised clenched-fist as she broke in the next game before wrapping up victory to set up a second-round meeting with Spain's Lara Arruabarrena.
"I was lucky today I made it," summed up Kvitova.
"It was really tough to break her serve. She hit almost everything."
While Cepede Royg has not made it past the first round of any major outside of Roland Garros, it was here in Paris 12 months ago that she reached the fourth round.
It was clear she was drawing on that experience on Monday as she unsettled Kvitova in both the first and third sets with her bone-rattling groundstrokes.
But the twice Wimbledon champion, who proved even her surgeon wrong by coming back to play top level tennis just five months after the attack, surged over the finishing line thanks to her nerves of steel.
"I'm not surprised she reached the fourth round last year. She really likes the conditions here and played very well. She didn't really miss much. It was pretty tough," said Kvitova.
Two-time Grand Slam winner Victoria Azarenka crashed out of the French Open in the first round losing 5-7 5-7 to Katerina Siniakova on Monday, playing only her fifth tournament of the year after a legal battle over the custody of her son.
The Belarusian returned to tennis in June last year following the birth of her son in 2016 but then put her career on hold again as she fought a legal battle against her former partner. A judge in California had ruled that her son Leo should not leave the state until custody was resolved.
After losing the first set, Azarenka showed signs of a comeback, winning a fierce-hitting baseline exchange to go to 2-2. But she was unable to build momentum even as her Czech opponent lost her cool over a handful of disputed line calls.
Former world number one Azarenka has endured a tough return to Europe's clay courts, losing in the second round at the Madrid Open before being dumped out of the first round in Rome. She is currently ranked 84 in the world.
The months-long custody fight over her son Leo has been a painful distraction for Azarenka, and the 28-year-old said she had been looking forward to her return to Paris.
"Ah Paris, we love each other, no?," She tweeted earlier this month.
In an open letter posted on social media last year, Azarenka said no one should ever have to decide between a child and their career.
Azarenka won the Australian Open in 2012 and 2013. Her best performance at Roland Garros was in 2013 when she lost in the semi-finals to Russia's Maria Sharapova. She has said she will play at Wimbledon this year.
Japan's Naomi Osaka displayed the best and worst sides of her game in a 6-2 7-5 first-round win against American Sofia Kenin at the French Open on Monday.
The 21st seed seemed en route to a nice morning stroll on court 3 in Paris but lost her focus in the second set before regaining her composure to set up a second-round meeting with Zarina Diyas of Kazakhstan.
Osaka, 20, defeated Victoria Azarenka in the first round in Rome earlier this month before managing only one game against world number one Simona Halep in the second, and she started on the right foot against Kenin.
She blazed through the opening set but let her guard down early in the second as Kenin broke in the first game to open a 2-0 lead.
The Japanese continued to spray the court with unforced errors, allowing her opponent to steal her serve a second time.
Then Kenin suffered a terrible meltdown as Osaka won 18 out of 20 points to go from 5-2 down to 6-5 up.
She wrapped it up on Kenin's serve on her first match point when the American sent a forehand long.
Kristina Mladenovic's crawl back to her best level stopped in abrupt fashion on Monday as she suffered a remarkable meltdown in a 7-6(10) 6-2 defeat by a resurgent Andrea Petkovic in the first round of the French Open.
The Frenchwoman, who had slipped down the rankings after 15 consecutive defeats between the end of July and mid-January, seemed on her way up again thanks to some recent landmark wins.
It appeared that a year after reaching the quarter-finals, she could make light work of German Petkovic, a former semi-finalist at Roland Garros. However, two consecutive double faults as she had three set points in the opening set's tiebreak threw her off balance.
Mladenovic, who recently beat former French Open finalist Sam Stosur, never recovered and allowed world number 107 Petkovic to claim only her third victory on the main tour this year -- also her fifth in as many encounters between the two.
Mladenovic started confidently on the Suzanne Lenglen court, where last year she beat then defending champion Garbine Muguruza to reach the last eight, opening up a 2-0 lead.
But Petkovic broke back and forced a tiebreak, in which the Frenchwoman, seeded 29th, went 6-3 ahead.
The mercury rose in the stadium with the crowd chanting 'Kiki, Kiki!' to support a player who set their hearts on fire last year.
Mladenovic, however, collapsed, serving two consecutive double faults on set points and eventually losing the tiebreak 12-10 as she netted a forehand.
Petkovic suffered late jitters as she served a double fault on match point, but on her fourth attempt, Mladenovic returned long.
Petkovic next faces Sweden's Johanna Larsson or American Bethanie Mattek-Sands.
The most recently minted Grand Slam champion in tennis booked her second round French Open slot on Monday as Caroline Wozniacki overcame a stuttering start to beat Danielle Collins 7-6(2) 6-1 in Paris.
The Dane, who landed her first major at the Australian Open earlier this year in what was her 43rd Grand Slam attempt, generally prefers faster surfaces, but looked increasingly at ease once she had ironed out some early glitches.
Collins, coming into this tournament on a career-high ranking of 42, fought throughout but was unable to hold off Wozniacki who won on a bizarre point after the umpire ruled a Collins shot had been long while the American, her back turned, was preparing to play on.
Seeded two here, Wozniacki is one of six players who could end the tournament world number one.

FRENCH OPEN DAY 2 RESULTS

Siniakova (CZE) beat Azarenka (BLS) 7-5 7-5
Kasatkina (RUS) [14] beat Kanepi (UKR) 6-4 6-1
Duque (COL) beat Sevastova (LAT) [20] 4-6 6-4 6-4
Perez (ESP) beat Jakupovic (SVN) 6-3 6-4
Buzamrnescu (ROM) [31] beat King (USA) 6-3 6-3
Giorgi (ITA) beat Min (USA) 6-3 6-2
Suarez Navarro (ESP) beat Konjuh (CRO) 6-0 6-1
Petkovic (GER) beat Mladenovic (FRA) [29] 7-6 6-3
Pera (USA) beat Vesnina (RUS) 6-3 6-2
Safarova (CZE) beat Ponchet (FRA) 6-4 6-1
Pliskova (CZE) beat KREJCIKOVA (CZE) 7-6 6-4
Tsurenk (UKR) beat Vogele (SUI) 4-6 6-2 6-2
Vekic (CRO) beat Bondarenko (UKR) 6-2 6-4
Watson (GBR) beat Dodin (FRA) 6-3 6-0
Bencic (SUI) beat Chiesa (ITA) 3-6 7-6 7-5
Rybarikova (SVN) [19] beat Kumkhum (THA) 6-3 6-0
Flipkens (BEL) beat Maria (GER) 7-6 6-4
Wozniacki (DEN) [2] beat Collins (USA) 7-6 6-1
Vandeweghe (USA) [15] beat Siegemund (GER) 6-4 6-4
Sakkari (GRE) beat Minella (LUX) 7-6 6-2
Dolehide (USA) beat Golubic (SUI) 6-4 6-4
Osaka (JAP) beat Kenin (USA) 6-2 7-5
Kvitova (CZE) beat Cepede Royg (PAR) 3-6 6-1 7-5
Arruabarrena (ESP) beat Babos (HUN) 7-6 6-3
Keys (USA) [13] beat Vickery (USA) 6-3 6-3
Peterson (SWE) beat Hsieh (TWN) 6-4 6-3
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