The Phnom Penh Post

Wawrinka ends run of losses at Queens

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STAN Wawrinka kicked off his Wimbledon preparatio­ns with a 6-2, 6-3 win over British youngster Cameron Norrie in the Queen’s Club first round on Monday.

Wawrinka has struggled to return to peak form since suffering a left knee injury last year that required two operations and wiped out the second half of the Swiss star’s season.

Still hampered by the problem this term, Wawrinka was sidelined again for three months in between a second round exit at the Australian Open and a first round loss in the French Open.

The 33-year-old arrived in west London having lost six of his last seven ATP Tour matches and, given grass has never been Wawrinka’s favourite surface, he might have feared more misery at the pre-Wimbledon event.

But the three-time Grand Slam champion had an obliging opponent in wild card entry Norrie.

Wawrinka hardly had to break sweat to see off Norrie and next faces former Queen’s winner Sam Querrey of the United States, who beat British wild card and ATP Tour debutant Jay Clarke 6-3, 6-3.

“Mentally it’s tough when you see how far you are and how long it will take. Still now, it’s not easy,” Wawrinka said of his injury woes. “It takes time to get where you want to be. I need to be really patient with myself.”

Murray set for return

In other first round action, top seed Marin Cilic made a flying start to his bid for another strong grass-court campaign with a 6-3, 6-4 win over Spanish veteran Fernando Verdasco.

Former US Open champion Cilic is bidding for a second Queen’s title and a fourth appearance in the final after losing last year’s title match against Feliciano Lopez.

The world No6, who finished as Australian Open runner-up in January, was back on grass in London for the first time since his tearful injury-plagued Wimbledon final defeat against Roger Federer last year.

Cilic made short work of Verdasco and his second-round opponent is Luxembourg’s Gilles Muller, who beat rising Canadian star Denis Shapovalov 7-6 (9/7), 7-6 (8/6).

Andy Murray was on Tuesday set to make his first appearance for 11 months after finally recovering from a hip injury that needed surgery in January. against temperamen­tal Australian Nick Kyrgios.

Kyrgios pushed Roger Federer to three sets before narrowly losing in the Stuttgart semis at the weekend.

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