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US Open 2019 - Diego Schwartzman dumps out sixth seed Alexander Zverev

Carrie Dunn

Updated 03/09/2019 at 08:30 GMT

Argentina's Diego Schwartzman dispatched a misfiring Alexander Zverev 3-6 6-2 6-4 6-3 to reach the U.S. Open quarter-finals on Monday after heaping more Grand Slam misery on the sixth-seeded German.

Diego Schwartzman lors de son duel face à Alexander Zverev / US Open

Image credit: Getty Images

Schwartzman had not been on court for more than two hours in any of his previous matches and the number 20 seed was by far the fresher of the pair on a rainy day at Flushing Meadows, seeing off a weary Zverev in just over three hours.
It was Labor Day in the United States and Zverev, who had seen every one of his matches go to four sets or more, made hard work of his fourth round contest, committing 17 double faults.
The fatal mistake, however, came in the fourth set with Schwartzman up 4-2 and Zverev fighting to stay in the match when the German was slapped with a point penalty after directing an obscenity at his box that gave the Argentina a 5-2 lead.
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Diego Schwartzman beat Alexander Zverev 3-6, 6-2, 6-4, 6-3

Image credit: Getty Images

The 22-year-old had earlier been given a warning for slamming the ball into the crowd.
"I mean, code violation is fine," said Zverev. "He said he gave me a warning before. I didn't hear it. Diego didn't hear it. Most of the crowd didn't hear it.
I think the umpires next time should let me know about it.

RACKET TALK

Zverev was a bit sheepish about the incident, explaining that he believed the up and coming young players needed to shut their mouths and let their play do the talking.
"There's a lot of young guys that do things on the tennis court that maybe is not the best thing to do," said Zverev. "I don't want the next generation to be known for that.
"Let your tennis racket talk for you kind of.
"I hope some of the NextGen will kind of learn from the older guys like Roger (Federer) and Rafa (Nadal) who have been unbelievable over their career, really let their racket talk for them, not try to distract opponents, something like that."
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Alexander Zverev

Image credit: Getty Images

Regarded as an emerging talent and potential threat to the domination of Roger Federer, Rafa Nadal and Novak Djokovic, Zverev has so far failed to meet expectations, especially at Grand Slams where he has never been beyond the quarter-finals.
For Schwartzman the win was just his sixth in 28 attempts against a top-10 opponent, sending him through to the last eight at a major tournament for only the third time.
Schwartzman, who cruised into the fourth round without dropping a set, saw that run end quickly when Zverev grabbed the opener despite six double faults.
The Argentine had begun smartly with the early break to go up 2-0 only to have Zverev sweep the next five games on the way to taking the first set.
The second began the same way with Schwartzman snatching the early break but this time he did not squander the advantage, breaking the misfiring German twice more to level the contest.
Zverev had the first break in the third set but Schwartzman had the last by breaking the German at 5-4 to lead the match.
Schwartzman took a stranglehold on the contest by racing to a 4-0 lead then, after a brief fight back from Zverev, finished off his opponent on his second match point with a stinging forehand winner
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