French Open

Sock rocks on his preferred surface

Jack Sock of the U.S. returns the ball to  Bulgaria's Grigor Dimitrov during their first round match of the French Open tennis tournament at the Roland Garros stadium, Tuesday, May 26, 2015 in Paris.
Jack Sock of the U.S. returns the ball to Bulgaria's Grigor Dimitrov during their first round match of the French Open tennis tournament at the Roland Garros stadium, Tuesday, May 26, 2015 in Paris.

PARIS -- Ah, the French Open, that time of year when a certain question is asked repeatedly by American tennis fans.

Why can't the country's players, particularly the men, find success on red clay?

Now comes along Jack Sock, a 22-year-old born in Nebraska and currently residing in Florida who unabashedly calls the slow stuff "my favorite surface."

Yes, that's right, even though there aren't many red clay courts in the United States -- Sock first encountered them in Europe -- and even though, at first glance, they are considered less-than-ideal for players who thrive on speedy serves and forehands.

Sock and another U.S. man, 16th-seeded John Isner, both fit that description. Both also won first-round matches Tuesday at Roland Garros.

"This just suits my game very well," Sock said. "I'm able to take my time and kind of maneuver the ball around. Movement is another big part of my game. I feel like on the clay, I get to a lot of balls."

He did just that Tuesday on bullring-shaped Court 1 during a 7-6, (7), 6-2, 6-3 victory over Bulgaria's Grigor Dimitrov, who was a Wimbledon semifinalist last year and was seeded 10th in Paris, making him the top man to lose so far.

Dimitrov's take?

"Jack played his game," he said.

Cleanly, too. Sock hit 30 winners and made only 18 unforced errors (10 fewer than Dimitrov) and saved all 6 break points he faced. He pounded serves at up to 136 mph, jumped into his big forehands, and effectively pressed forward to win the point on 19 of 25 trips to the net.

Not traditional clay-court tennis, necessarily. But it worked.

"I may have been one of the first to really like it," said Sock, who won his first ATP singles title last month in Houston on green clay. "For me personally, I look forward to this time of year."

The 6-10 Isner, who beat Italy's Andreas Seppi 7-5, 6-2, 6-3, is also learning to like the crushed dirt.

"A lot is said about clay and how it's a defensive surface. It's sort of, I would say, a misconception," Isner said. "I think clay is a very good attacking surface. A guy like [Rafael Nadal], yeah, he plays great defense but knocks the cover off the ball."

Four of the seven U.S. men in this year's field are gone already, as are 13 of the 17 women from the country. Andre Agassi was the last American man to even get to the quarterfinals at the French Open, and that was way back in 2003.

Sock's victory over Dimitrov represented the day's only departure by a seeded man. Two seeded women were beaten: No. 6 Eugenie Bouchard, a semifinalist at the French Open and runner-up at Wimbledon last year but a loser of eight of her past nine matches; and No. 25 Jelena Jankovic, the runner-up at the 2008 U.S. Open.

Things went as expected for the best of the best as Nadal, Novak Djokovic and Serena Williams -- owners of 41 Grand Slam singles titles among them -- all delivered straight-set victories on Court Philippe Chatrier.

There were some blips, however brief. Nine-time champion Nadal lamented that he started slowly. Djokovic was two points from losing the second set before reeling off 22 of 29 points. And Williams was fooled by the awkward spin of one shot and was plunked by the ball, leading to laughter.

"I'm allegedly a professional tennis player and I was thinking, 'I'm going to hit a backhand.' 'I will hit a forehand.' And, 'I will run around and hit a backhand.' 'No, no, no, run around and hit a forehand.' Next thing I know, it hit me in the back," Williams said. "So I was, like, embarrassed. At the same time, I thought it was really funny.

"It happens to the best of us. Maybe not. But to me."

Sports on 05/27/2015

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