'Spectator' Zverev taken to brink at Australian Open
Facing a second consecutive second-round exit in Melbourne, the German rallied to come through 7-5, 3-6, 4-6, 7-6 (7/5), 7-6 (10/7) after a gripping contest stretching to four-and-a-half hours on Margaret Court Arena.
World number six Alexander Zverev said he felt like a spectator and that Slovak qualifier Lukas Klein deserved to win after being pushed to the limit at the Australian Open on Thursday.
Facing a second consecutive second-round exit in Melbourne, the German rallied to come through 7-5, 3-6, 4-6, 7-6 (7/5), 7-6 (10/7) after a gripping contest stretching to four-and-a-half hours on Margaret Court Arena.
But it was major wake-up call for the sixth seed against a player ranked 163, in only his second Grand Slam, and who currently has no coach.
His reward is a third-round clash with unseeded American Alex Michelsen.
"He played extremely well. He played very, very aggressive, hitting every single ball as hard as he could from both sides," said Zverev.
"A lot of the times I was a spectator in the match. I was just witnessing whether he's going to hit a winner or miss. That's not a nice feeling to be in, especially in the important moments.
"To be honest, he probably deserved to win the match more than me today, but that's tennis sometimes."
Zverev, who is facing a trial in May for allegedly assaulting his former girlfriend in 2020, an accusation he denies, had also struggled in his first-round match, dropping a set.
The 26-year-old admitted he knew nothing about Klein.
"I didn't know him at all. To be honest, if he would have been in a room, I would have not known that he's my opponent," he said.
Zverev started well, securing the only break in the first set to take charge. But it was short-lived.
Klein saved two break points on his opening serve in the second set then pounced with a baseline winner in the sixth game to break Zverev and level it at one set each.
The 25-year-old Slovak carried the momentum into the third set, immediately breaking with a net volley and never relinquishing the lead.
They went toe-to-toe in the fourth set, taking it to a nail-biting tie-break, where Klein's netted forehand on serve at 5-4 made the difference.
With the match on the line, Zverev saved a break point on serve early in the fifth set and responded by breaking Klein in the next game for 2-1.
But the gutsy Slovak would not go away, breaking back to level at 3-3 as the crowd roared them on before a tense tie-break finale.