Audio By Carbonatix
Britain's Dan Evans raced through to the Australian Open third round, helped by winning a bizarre point that left his opponent Jeremy Chardy fuming.
Evans won 6-4 6-4 6-1 but the French veteran was unhappy the umpire did not call let on break point in the first set when a ball fell out of his pocket.
Evans, 32, took the pivotal break when Chardy hit into the net and went on to wrap up victory in less than two hours.
"I'm not sure how much he believed in his argument," said 25th seed Evans.
Evans put the drama behind him in a confident performance that teed up a third-round match against Russian fifth seed Andrey Rublev.
"You never go out there looking for a fast one but once I got on top it was important to stay on top and take care of the third set," said Evans, whose best run in Melbourne came in 2017 when he reached the fourth round.
"I let three break points go in the first game of the third set but in the end I did a good job."
Evans is the second British player to reach the Australian Open third round this year, with Cameron Norrie going through on Wednesday and Andy Murray hoping to join them by beating Australia's Thanasi Kokkinakis later on Thursday.

Why was Chardy furious and what is the rule?
After hitting into the net with the shot after the ball fell out of his pocket, Chardy appealed to chair umpire Miriam Bley for the point to be replayed.
When a ball falls out of a player's pocket it is classed as hindrance and a let - which means the point is restarted - should be called the moment it happens to halt play.
Bley did call let but her call came after Chardy hit the forehand into the net.
Chardy, 35, called it the "biggest mistake of the Australian Open" and accused the umpire of "watching the birds" instead of the play.
There was a long delay while Chardy challenged the decision and, after he was told to play on, his remonstrations continued for the next couple of games.
Evans had little sympathy for his opponent, although he conceded allowing a let for a ball dropping out of a player's pocket was the "worst rule ever".
"If that was me and I really believed in it I would have been more forceful in my arguments," he said.
"I didn't see the ball come out of his pocket, I didn't know where it had come from.
"The only bad job the umpire did was letting it drag on and not getting us back out there to play."
Latest Stories
-
CICM backs BoG’s microfinance sector reform programme; New Year Debt Recovery School comes off January-February 2026
8 minutes -
GIPC Boss urges diaspora to invest remittances into productive ventures
15 minutes -
Cedi ends 2025 as 4th best performing currency in Africa
19 minutes -
Obaapa Fatimah Amoadu Foundation launches in Mankessim as 55 artisans graduate
1 hour -
Behold Thy Mother Foundation celebrates Christmas with aged mothers in Assin Manso
1 hour -
GHIMA reaffirms commitment to secured healthcare data
1 hour -
John Boadu pays courtesy call on former President Kufuor, seeks guidance on NPP revival
2 hours -
Emissions Levy had no impact on air pollution, research reveals
3 hours -
DSTV enhanced packages stay in force as subscriptions rise following price adjustments
3 hours -
Financial Stability Advisory Council holds final meeting for 2025
3 hours -
Education in Review: 2025 marks turning point as Mahama resets Ghana’s education sector
3 hours -
Nigeria AG orders fresh probe into alleged intimidation and assault of Sam Jonah’s River Park estate staff
3 hours -
Concerned Small Scale Miners commend GoldBod’s efforts in addressing gold smuggling
3 hours -
Haruna Mohammed claims Ghana Audit Service undermined
3 hours -
5 members of notorious robbery syndicate in Tema, Accra arrested
3 hours
