“Yeah, I mean, it's an honor. . . I'm the No. 1 American now, which isn't as cool as being the No. 1 American in the '90s or something, or the 2000s. It's pretty neat to say, but it's nothing I would brag about or anything like that.”—John Isner, after losing to Tomas Berdych, 6-4, 6-4, 6-4, in the fourth round at Roland Garros.
PARIS—John Isner’s bid to become the first American to reach the quarterfinals at Roland Garros since Andre Agassi in 2003 was crushed like a paper cup today in the hands Tomas Berdych. Isner was the last American standing, following third-round losses yesterday by Jack Sock and Donald Young.
You live by the sword, you die by the sword. Berdych, who stands 6'5" (still five inches shy of Isner’s 6'10"), beat a fellow advocate of the serve-based power game. The main difference, though, is that Berdych is a better mover than Isner, and he has a more versatile toolbox.
The match was first on Court Lenglen, before a sparse crowd and under threatening clouds. Isner was broken to start the match, and he had a look at a break point in the very next game. But he failed to convert it, and it was the last chance he had to break Berdych’s serve until the very last game of the match. It was a pretty comprehensive display of all-around superiority by Berdych, even though the 10th-seeded Isner was seeded just four notches below the No. 6 seed.