All 15 American men out of US Open after 3rd round

Subscribe Now Choose a package that suits your preferences.
Start Free Account Get access to 7 premium stories every month for FREE!
Already a Subscriber? Current print subscriber? Activate your complimentary Digital account.

NEW YORK — Might be best to say that Tim Smyczek, much like American men’s tennis, ran out of gas Sunday night.

The 25-year-old from Milwaukee, who served up a funny headline when he told about how the car he was riding in ran out of gas en route to the U.S. Open last week, was two points away from helping his country avoid an ignominious fate.

“I never heard somebody yell out from the stands, ‘You’re our last hope,’” Smyczek said.

But he could not pull through against Marcel Granollers.

He lost 6-4, 4-6, 0-6, 6-3, 7-5 to the Spaniard in front of a rowdy crowd chanting “USA! USA!” in the Grandstand, and now, the Americans don’t have a single man in the round of 16 at their own Grand Slam for the first time since the tournament started in 1881.

“Couldn’t be much more disappointed right now, but these are the kind of situations you dream about,” Smyczek said. “It was pretty cool to be the last American in the draw for a day. Got a little taste of it.”

Not that this latest American flop is all on Smyczek, who came in ranked 109th and was making his first appearance in the third round of a Grand Slam.

It was scheduling as much as anything that left him standing alone — last among the 15 U.S. men who started this tournament — when the lights came on Sunday night. Jack Sock and John Isner lost their third-round matches Saturday. Isner, the highest-seeded man at No. 13, withered in a four-set loss to Philipp Kohlschreiber, saying his couple of attempts to rile up the crowd in the fourth set wore him out.

In the second round, 26th-seeded Sam Querrey fell to Adrian Mannarino.

Smyczek’s departure means nobody from the country that gave tennis Connors, McEnroe, Sampras, Agassi and Roddick reached the fourth round at any Grand Slam in 2013. Last month, for the first time in the 40 years of the ATP rankings, there was a week with no U.S. men in the top 20.

“I know we got really spoiled with Pete, Andre, all those guys, and Andy for so many years,” Smyczek said. “But I think it’s also a really exciting time because there’s five, six, seven guys that are hovering right around 100 and have a good chance to make a big breakthrough.”

Could Smyczek, who at 5-foot-9, sometimes jumps to power through his forehands, be the guy?

For a while during the 3-hour, 24-minute match against Granollers, it very much looked like he might be moving on to Week 2 — and that maybe he’d be in the news for something other than the mishap he experienced before his first-round match, when the tournament-provided car he was riding in ran out of gas en route to Flushing Meadows.

Granollers, who played the role of the bad guy in a stadium packed with U.S. fans, said there’s a good future for U.S. tennis.

“Every year is different. The quality of the game nowadays is quite even,” he said. “It just happens that no one managed to get that far, but there are several talented American players, and I’m sure that they will have good results in the future.”