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Tennis-Zverev stands tall to see off Royer and reach Wimbledon third round

By Thomson Reuters Jul 2, 2026 | 11:22 AM

By Shrivathsa Sridhar

LONDON, July 2 (Reuters) – French Open champion Alexander Zverev continued his bid for a second straight Grand Slam trophy as the German beat unseeded Valentin Royer 6-1 6-3 7-6(3) on Thursday ​to move into the Wimbledon third round.

Just weeks after ending ‌his long wait for a maiden major at Roland Garros, Zverev barely put a foot wrong against his French opponent, taking full control of the Court One contest from the outset and overcoming some late resistance to advance.

“For 2-1/2 sets I played an almost ‌perfect ​match but I lost focus and concentration,” Zverev ⁠said after his 50th tour-level ⁠match win on grass.

“He made it interesting, but I’m happy to be through in straight sets. Even though I love to play here, it’s nice to win easier in the beginning of the week.”

After Royer ​held serve to open the match, Zverev claimed the next nine games without reply by showcasing near-flawless tennis from both flanks, and the second ⁠seed went on to double his lead in ⁠the match with a forehand winner on set point.

An ​early break in the third set gave Zverev the ideal platform to close ​out a convincing victory, but the 29-year-old wobbled slightly with a ‌double fault and a forehand error to let Royer claw his way back to 4-4.

Royer forced a deciding tiebreak from there but Zverev was in no mood to be dragged into an extended workout and held his nerve ⁠to book a third-round meeting with American Marcos Giron, who beat another Frenchman in Quentin Halys.

“I’m not old yet, but I’m getting to an age where you ⁠need to save energy,” ‌Zverev added.

“It builds confidence to win easily, especially in ⁠Wimbledon. I love this tournament but I’m waiting for ​a ‌big result … if I play like this it can ​happen this ⁠year.

“You need to have a short-term memory in tennis — good or bad — because the next tournament is around the corner. I won the French Open, I’d been waiting for a long time and it was such a relief, but here we are in Wimbledon two weeks later.”

(Reporting by Shrivathsa Sridhar in London; Editing ​by Alison Williams)