Tennis

Milos Raonic advances, Novak Djokovic out at Monte Carlo Masters

Milos Raonic outlasted Pablo Cuevas 7-5, 2-6, 7-6 (5) to advance to the third round of the Monte Carlo Masters on Wednesday, while Novak Djokovic was stunned by Jiri Vesely 6-4, 2-6, 6-4.

Raonic to face Dzumhur in 3rd round

Milos Raonic advanced to the third round of the Monte Carlo Masters with a 7-5, 2-6, 7-6 (5) victory over Pablo Cuevas.

Milos Raonic's big serve is serving him well at the Monte Carlo Masters.

The Canadian fired 11 aces Wednesday in a 7-5, 2-6, 7-6 (5) second-round win over Uruguay's Pablo Cuevas. He also committed two double faults. 

Raonic's serve has been dangerous at this tournament despite playing on a deadening clay surface. He had 13 aces in his first-round win over Italy's Marco Cecchinato.

Against Cuevas, Raonic saved eight of 12 break points while breaking his opponent three times on 10 chances in a close match.

The 10th seed from Thornhill, Ont., will play Damir Dzumhur of Bosnia and Herzegovina in the next round.

Raonic won his only previous career meeting with Dzumhur last month at the Miami Masters.

Djokovic upset

Meanwhile, top-ranked Novak Djokovic suffered his earliest loss in three years when he was stunned by 55th-ranked Jiri Vesely 6-4, 2-6, 6-4 in the second round. 

It was also his first loss in a completed match since November, having retired from a match in February with eye infections. This was his first match of the year on clay.

Defending champion Djokovic saved a match point when he was serving against Vesely in the ninth game. But the Czech, who had never beaten a top-10 player, sealed the win on his second match point in the next game when Djokovic's forehand landed wide.

"I was playing really, really bad," Djokovic said. "I wasn't feeling any freshness."

It was his first loss in a Masters-level event since August. Since then he'd won nine of 10 events, including two grand slams, four consecutive Masters titles, and the ATP Finals.

"There is the proof that nobody is unbeatable," Djokovic said. "It's not easy to lose the match in terms of accepting it, but I have to congratulate my opponent."

Nadal survives scare

Earlier, eight-time Monte Carlo champion Rafael Nadal dropped serve twice and still beat Aljaz Bedene of Britain 6-3, 6-3 in the second round.

Nadal was broken for a second time when serving for the match against Bedene at 5-2, but the Spaniard broke straight back to seal victory.

The fifth-seeded Nadal, who won the last of his titles here in 2012, next faces 12th-seeded Dominic Thiem of Austria.

"He has a great serve and a great forehand," Nadal said of Thiem. "I need more victories to be 100 per cent confident."

Meanwhile, since January 2015, Djokovic had reached 19 finals in 21 tournaments, winning 15 — and the Serb was 28-1 on the year heading into Monte Carlo, having not dropped a set when winning the Miami Masters two weeks ago.

His previous second-defeat was at the 2013 Madrid Masters.

Athough Djokovic looked rusty, it was difficult to predict a second defeat of the season after his retirement to Spain's Feliciano Lopez in the Dubai quarterfinals.

Djokovic, at least, is looking forward to a rest.

"I will get a long break now," Djokovic said. "The time off will serve me well, mentally mostly."

"I have to move on, it's already behind me. I've had an incredible start to the season, and this match will not disturb my preparation for the rest of the season."

In terms of ranking, this was Djokovic's worst since June 2010, when he lost to 74th-ranked Xavier Malisse on grass in the third round at Queens.

Vesely, whose lone ATP title came more than a year ago in Auckland, did not face a break point in the first set, and concluded it confidently on serve.

Djokovic lost his opening two service games in the third set, and an ace from Vesely put him 4-2 up.

Djokovic saved the first match point with an angled backhand volley at the net, but a loose forehand on the next gave Vesely his biggest ever win.​

No. 4 Stan Wawrinka, the 2014 champion, also advanced past Philipp Kohlschreiber 7-6 (2), 7-5 into the third round and next faces No. 15 Gilles Simon of France.

With files from CBC Sports