World no. 10 Daniil Medvedev suffered a surprising 0-6, 0-6 defeat by the hands of Ninetieth-ranked Matteo Berrettini within the third spherical of the Monte-Carlo Masters, smashing his racquet seven instances in seen frustration. The 2021 Wimbledon finalist produced a flawless show in a match that lasted simply 49 minutes, leaving Medvedev with no single recreation.
The defeat marked the primary time in Medvedev’s profession that he has didn’t win a recreation in a match, underlining the sheer dominance of Berrettini on clay.
“I believe it was probably the greatest performances of my life,” Berrettini stated. “I missed solely three pictures in your entire match, and it is not simple towards a tough participant like Daniil. The sport plan labored completely, and all my weapons have been firing.”
“I confronted two break factors within the first recreation, however after that I felt I used to be taking part in higher than him. I wasn’t anticipating a 6-0, 6-0 win, however I stored my focus since you by no means know-it can take only one break to vary a match,” he added.
Berrettini has been in outstanding kind this week, not dropping a single recreation in his opening two matches, together with a 4-0 lead when Roberto Bautista Agut retired within the first spherical. The 29-year-old former High 10 participant will subsequent face Joao Fonseca or Arthur Rinderknech within the third spherical.
MEDVEDEV’S STRUGGLES ON CLAY
Competing on clay for the primary time this season, Medvedev struggled badly on Court docket Rainier III, committing 27 unforced errors and failing to create a single recreation level on his serve. The 30-year-old had loved a robust begin to the 12 months on arduous courtsprofitable titles in Dubai and Brisbane, however that kind failed to hold over to clay.
The match additionally marked Berrettini’s first-ever tour-level double bagel victory and his first High 10 win since defeating Alexander Zverev at Monte-Carlo final season. The outcome inevitably drew comparisons to Alex de Minaur’s dominant 6–0, 6–0 quarter-final win over Grigor Dimitrov on the 2025 Monte-Carlo Masters, underlining simply how uncommon and emphatic such scorelines are on the highest degree.
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