New York: The intense clash between British tennis player Dan Evans and Karen Khachanov of America on Wednesday became the longest-ever US Open match since the introduction of the tie-breakers. The match was eventually won by Evans with 3-2 against the huge challenged posed by the American Khachanov.
During a match that eventually set a US Open record for length, Dan walked towards the scoreboard not to check how he was performing, but to know exactly from how long hours he had been playing on the court.
"In the fourth set, I had to check the set to see what set we were in. I wasn't entirely sure what set we were in." More than an hour later," Evans said. The British emerged triumphant in the longest match at the US Open since tiebreakers were introduced in 1970, beating Karen Khachanov 6-7 (6), 7-6 (2), 7-6 (4), 4-6, 6-4 in a match that lasted for five hours, 35 minutes.
The 34-year-old Evans trailed 4-0 in the fifth set before running off the final six games. The final point, fittingly, was a marathon 22-shot rally, with Evans on the defensive for much of the point before hitting a hard shot to the corner that the No. 23-seeded Khachanov couldn't get back over the net with his backhand.
The previous record was 5 hours, 26 minutes, when Stefan Edberg beat Michael Chang in a five-setter in the 1992 semifinals.