Gael Monfils played near-perfect tennis to crush Australian Max Purcell 6-1 6-2 and reach the second round of Indian Wells but three-times Grand Slam champion Stan Wawrinka was far from flawless and crashed out to Czech Tomas Machac.
Frenchman Monfils, 37, fired down 10 aces and deployed the kind of creative shotmaking that has endeared himself to tennis fans in the California desert for years, soaking in the applause on a sunny centre court after sealing the dominant win.
His 19-year-old compatriot Arthur Fils, who advanced with a straight sets win over Nuno Borges, said Monfils was an inspiration.
“I don’t know how he did that because we were talking before the match about how Purcell is a very good opponent,” Fils told reporters.
“Then I went to take a nap and woke up and it was 6-1 5-2? I think everyone on the tour wants to see him play more and more years.
“It would be very nice to play with him in doubles one day.”
Monfils will battle eighth seed Hubert Hurkacz of Poland in the second round while Fils faces Spaniard Alejandro Davidovich Fokina, who is seeded 23rd.
Earlier, Wawrinka fell 7-6(3) 4-6 6-2 to Machac as the Swiss 38-year-old continued his poor recent form.
Wawrinka, who reached a career high of world number three a decade ago, was unable to match the 23-year-old Czech’s level in the deciding set, his signature one-handed backhand sailing wide on match point.
Wawrinka lost in the first round of this year’s Australian Open, the second round of the Argentina Open, and the Rio Open first round before coming to the California desert, where he was a finalist in 2017. Machac will play French 21st seed Adrian Mannarino in the second round today. Croatian Borna Coric, Russian Roman Safiullin, China’s Shang Juncheng and American teenager Alex Michelsen were among other players who advanced to the second round on Friday before play was halted for the second consecutive day due to rain.

Murray says tennis should follow rugby’s lead in the way players treat officials
Andy Murray said players must be more careful about how they treat officials as “lines have probably been crossed” in recent years, and pointed to rugby as an example of how to interact with them respectfully.
The former world number one was speaking at Indian Wells where he is set to meet Andrey Rublev, who was defaulted in Dubai last week after an official said he used an obscenity towards a line judge.
The Russian denied the accusation and later successfully appealed the decision.
“All of us players – and I think I’ve been guilty of it myself – we need to be a little bit careful of the way that we speak to and treat officials,” Murray said.
“I understand in the heat of battle and stuff, sometimes things happen.
But for the last four or five years, there has been a number of instances where lines have probably been crossed and maybe not enough has been done about it.”
The ATP had warned of stricter punishments for on-court misconduct in 2022 after Alexander Zverev was thrown out of an event in Acapulco for smashing his racket against the umpire’s chair and a series of angry outbursts by Nick Kyrgios.
“We all probably need to have a bit of a look at ourselves and go, ‘Is this really the way that we want to be dealing with officials, with bad line calls and things?’ Murray added.
“Rugby is a great example for how to deal with officials,” Murray explained.
“Everything is dealt with respectfully. We probably could do a better job with it in tennis as well,” he added.
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