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Reuters
Reuters
Sport
Pritha Sarkar

Kerber finds it tough going at the top

Tennis - Wimbledon - London, Britain - July 4, 2017 Germany’s Angelique Kerber celebrates during her first round match against USA’s Irina Falconi REUTERS/Matthew Childs

LONDON (Reuters) - There can be few things in tennis more embarrassing than being beaten in the first round of a grand slam tournament while ranked number one in the world.

It is a painful memory that is still fresh in Angelique Kerber's mind, having suffered that misfortune at the French Open just five weeks ago.

Tennis - Wimbledon - London, Britain - July 4, 2017 Germany’s Angelique Kerber shakes hands with USA’s Irina Falconi after winning their first round match REUTERS/Matthew Childs

It is a fate that has befallen only two women at Wimbledon in the professional era -- fellow German Steffi Graf in 1994 and Martina Hingis in 1999 and 2001.

But such has been the woeful form of Kerber, many pundits feared she might be heading for a Paris-London first-round exit double on Tuesday -- a day when she had been handed the honour of opening Centre Court proceedings in the absence of title holder Serena Williams.

Luckily for her she proved the naysayers wrong with her 6-4 6-4 win over American qualifier Irina Falconi.

Tennis - Wimbledon - London, Britain - July 4, 2017 Germany’s Angelique Kerber in action during her first round match against USA’s Irina Falconi REUTERS/Matthew Childs

However, the manner of her win against an opponent who had never won a match at Wimbledon in four previous visits and is ranked 247th, would have done little to quell the belief that Kerber is unlikely to repeat her spectacular 2016 run when she finished runner-up to Williams.

"Playing first rounds in grand slams are always tough, especially with (the memory of) my first-round match that I lost in Paris," Kerber told reporters after registering her first win at a grand slam tournament since bowing out in the fourth round at January's Australian Open.

"I was actually just thinking about point-by-point, trying to finding my rhythm during the whole match," added the German who produced 13 unforced errors and only eight winners in a below-par opening set against Falconi.

Tennis - Wimbledon - London, Britain - July 4, 2017 USA’s Irina Falconi in action during her first round match against Germany’s Angelique Kerber REUTERS/Matthew Childs

A season after being the toast of the tennis world by winning two grand slam titles and finishing runner up to Williams at the All England Club, the 29-year-old admitted that life at the top had not been an easy ride.

"There is much more expectation, much more pressure, from me, from outside, from everything," said Kerber, whose number one ranking is on the line during the Wimbledon fortnight.

"It's easier to go there than to stay there."

Tennis - Wimbledon - London, Britain - July 4, 2017 USA’s Irina Falconi in action during her first round match against Germany’s Angelique Kerber REUTERS/Matthew Childs

Such have been Kerber's trials and tribulations this year -- reaching only one final compared with a WTA tour-leading eight in 2016 -- that one false move here and the chasing duo of Karolina Pliskova or Simona Halep could unseat her from the top spot.

(Reporting by Pritha Sarkar, editing by Clare Lovell)

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