Japanese veteran upstages Rafa and Justine show

PARIS,  (Reuters) – On the day King Rafa and Queen  Justine took the first steps to reclaiming their Roland Garros  thrones, veteran Kimiko Date Krumm eclipsed both former  champions with a fairytale victory.

The Japanese, who turns 40 this year, sent 2009 runner-up  and recent world No. 1 Dinara Safina packing in three sets  despite a calf injury that meant she ended the match hobbling  around virtually on one leg.

Rafael Nadal, playing his first match at Roland Garros since  his shock fourth-round defeat last year, beat French teenager  Gianni Mina 6-2 6-2 6-2 and Justin Henin, also four-times  champion, overcame Bulgaria’s Tsvetana Pironkova.

Sixth seed Andy Roddick avoided a first-round exit at the  hands of Finn Jarkko Nieminen with a battling 6-2 4-6 4-6 7-6  6-3 victory.

“It’s just a matter of surviving and advance. Today I guess  I found a way to get through it,” the American said.

Former champion Juan Carlos Ferrero, fellow Spaniard David  Ferrer and Australia’s Lleyton Hewitt enjoyed more comfortable  routes through while former world number one Maria Sharapova  reached the second round just before a late-evening downpour.

Date Krumm made her French Open debut in 1989 when Safina  was three but, in her 32nd grand slam, she showed amazing  tenacity to outlast the brittle Russian for a 3-6 6-4 7-5  victory. She becomes the oldest woman to reach the second round  at the claycourt slam since Briton Virginia Wade in 1985.

“Today during the match many times I was thinking is it  better to retire or not,” Date Krumm, who quit the sport in 1996  before her racing driver husband convinced her to return 11  years later, told reporters.

“My condition was very bad. But she started to get a little  bit nervous and then started to make easy mistakes. I tried  everything. I’m sad for her but very happy for me.”

VIRTUALLY EMPTY

Court Suzanne Lenglen was virtually empty when Fernando  Verdasco opened the third day by beating Igor Kunitsyn but by  the time Date Krumm limped off to make way for Nadal there was  not an empty seat in the house.

It is impossible to walk far in Paris without seeing a  poster of the Spaniard and after last year’s shock loss to Robin  Soderling and his subsequent knee problems there was a sense of  relief among his adoring fans that the real Rafa was back.

Not that he played anywhere near his best against  18-year-old Mina and his aura will take a while to return.

At times Nadal, who bagged the Monte Carlo, Rome and Madrid  titles en route to Paris, was surprised by the zest of an  opponent with nothing to lose, but was never seriously ruffled.

“I didn’t really serve well and I was playing too much from  the baseline and I couldn’t really move around the way I wanted  to because I was too nervous,” Nadal, who wore a space-age  $425,000 watch, told reporters after his workout against the  world No. 655.

“Today, unfortunately I couldn’t really play the way I  wanted. I was a bit tense, more than usual.”

Like Nadal, Henin is a massive fans’ favourite at Roland  Garros — a place the Belgian has described as her own private  garden.

After a three-year absence she returned to find everything  pretty much how she left it before retiring in 2008.

Dressed in a no-nonsense pink skirt and top, she eased back into the old routine with a 6-4 6-3 victory — her 22nd  consecutive win at Roland Garros albeit three years after her  21st sealed a rare hat-trick of titles.

“I was feeling very happy just to be back on centre court,”  former world number one Henin, who came out of retirement in January, told reporters.

“It’s something that I never expected any more. I was here  two years ago and last year just as a spectator and I never  thought I’ll be on this court again. But as soon as I walked in and I was into my match, I felt a lot of things coming back.”