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McEnroe Wins Doubles Exhibition At SAP Open

SAN JOSE (CBS / AP) -- The hands were still soft, the volleys were crisp and the temper had calmed down 20 years after John McEnroe had last been a regular on the ATP Tour.

McEnroe made a brief return to play an exhibition doubles match Monday on the opening night of the SAP Open, teaming with young American Jack Sock to beat Gael Monfils and Steve Johnson 6-4, 6-4 in a lighthearted match.

McEnroe showed the deft skill at the net that made him one of the game's best doubles players ever in a match that included three players young enough to be his children.

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"If you know some of the tricks of the trade, I don't care," he said. "I'm covering half the court. This is beautiful for me.  I'm not saying I could go out and win things but I'd be comfortable going against anybody right now playing doubles."

McEnroe hit crisp volleys all match long, bringing back memories of his touring days when he won seven Grand Slam singles titles and 10 major doubles titles from 1977-92.

Even though he lacks the power of the younger, modern players, McEnroe was able to get his serve up as high as 125 mph—a feat he credited to a friendly radar gun operator rather than some newfound strength.

"I hit one 125 (mph)," he said. "I've never hit it that hard in my life. I owe that guy a dinner."

Perhaps the biggest difference besides the gray hair was the lack of temper tantrums that were such a regular part of his matches when he was on the tour. With the Hawk-Eye replay system in place, McEnroe had little to argue with the umpire or linespeople.

He challenged three calls in the match, winning one of them, and even got down on his belly to closely inspect a mark before challenging a call in the second set that he eventually lost. His only argument came when Monfils won a challenge on a shot that just clipped the back line.

"It's a conspiracy," McEnroe shouted after losing the point.

McEnroe said he would have loved to have had the replay system

during his playing career, when he was known perhaps as much for his demonstrative arguments as his sterling play.

"I would have won a lot more majors—in my opinion," McEnroe said. "Forty percent of the energy I wasted in losing it would have allowed me to sort of focus on playing."

The other players had little personal experience with McEnroe's brilliance during his hey-day starting in the late 1970s. Sock, 19, wasn't even born the last time McEnroe played in a major singles tournament and Monfils and Johnson were not born when McEnroe won his last major singles title in 1984.

But they still enjoyed the spectacle as much as the crowd of 5,157 did. Sock even joked after the match that he might drop partner Sam Querrey for the main doubles draw to play with McEnroe instead.

"To get a chance to play with a legend like that is always fun," Sock said. "I let him do all the work. His volleys and hands are incredible."

McEnroe was originally scheduled to play with defending champion Milos Raonic, who pulled out with a knee injury. Sock ended up teaming with McEnroe, and Johnson, the reigning NCAA champion at Southern California, played with Monfils.

Raonic is still expected to compete in the singles draw, starting with his second-round match Wednesday against Tobias Kamke. Kamke won the first match of the tournament earlier Monday when he beat Izak Van der Merwe 6-3, 6-3.

Sixth-seeded Kevin Anderson took on Grigor Dimitrov later in the only other singles match of the day.

(Copyright 2012 by CBS San Francisco. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.)

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