A second chance
A rule change introduced to prevent injured players from starting matches and then withdrawing mid-contest is what made the Trungelliti tale possible.
He had lost his final-round qualifying match on Friday, but when Nick Kyrgios pulled out of the main draw on Sunday and the next standby player, India's Prajnesh Gunneswaran, was unable to take part because he was already entered in the draw for a low-key event in Vicenza, Trungelliti was on the clock.
Argentina's Marco Trungelliti beats Bernard Tomic in the first round of the French Open.
Photo: APThat Trungelliti had never expected to be sliding on the regal clay courts of Roland Garros this year makes his victory so special.
That he had to hammer along the road for hour upon hour, squashed in with family members who had only arrived from Argentina days earlier for a holiday, to make the draw on time makes it extraordinary.
Bernard Tomic's loss to Marco Trungelliti has provided the feelgood story of the French Open so far.
Photo: APTrungelliti said that his brother Andre, mother Susana, and grandmother Daphne, had recently arrived, and that he'd been settling into his break.
"They had hired a small car to see Barcelona and some other places. So when I got the news, we just jumped in," he said.
"We left Barcelona at 1pm, arrived in Paris at 11pm or something ... so 10 hours. I then slept for five hours then arrived at the club at around 7.30am.
"In Argentina, unless you live in Buenos Aires, a 1000km drive is nothing, so it was all okay."
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The long-haired 28-year-old looked good value for his win over Tomic, and will next face Marco Cecchinato.
Trungelliti has the air of a man on a mission, and with better preparation for that second round match his family might well consider extending their trip to take in a most unlikely chapter.
The smile on his face as he clinched victory, and the grin and thumbs-up gestures he waved around the court as he left the arena showed this is one tennis player who is intent on making the most of a second chance.
"I am feeling so relaxed," he grinned. "For me it is perfect. I lost (in qualifying), I left, I ate barbecue – which for an Argentine is one of the reasons to stay alive – so I am very, very relaxed."
Reuters
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