
Jannik Sinner singes Jiri Lehecka to ease to French Open fourth round
World number one
Jannik Sinner
pummelled Jiri Lehecka at the
French Open
to reach the fourth round while third seed Jessica Pegula took a longer route with a battling victory over 2019 runner-up Marketa Vondrousova.
As grey skies enveloped Roland Garros after the temperature soared a day earlier, an unrelenting Sinner turned up the heat on Lehecka at Court Suzanne Lenglen to win the opening 11 games of their clash without any response.
Lehecka drew loud cheers when he finally got on the board but Sinner continued his masterclass and eased to a 6-0 6-1 6-2 victory to book a clash with Andrey Rublev, who advanced after injured Frenchman Arthur Fils pulled out.
In the women's singles, Vondrousova, shaking off a shoulder problem which saw her Wimbledon title defence ended in the first round last year, looked to be rediscovering her best form on Parisian clay.
READ MORE
She won the opening set of her match on Court Philippe Chatrier but American Pegula proved too good when it mattered to close out a 3-6 6-4 6-2 win and will face the winner of the all-French clash between Elsa Jacquemot and Lois Boisson.
Russian 18-year-old Mirra Andreeva outclassed Kazakh Yulia Putintseva 6-3 6-1 at Court Suzanne Lenglen and the sixth seed attributed the comfortable win to a colourful drawing a young supporter left for her on her bench.
'Wherever that little girl is, I want to thank her, because it's my lucky charm,' added sixth seed Andreeva, who became the youngest woman to complete 10 Roland Garros singles match wins since Swiss two-times runner-up Martina Hingis.
Spanish 10th seed Paula Badosa would have wished for a bit of luck to force a third set against a dominant Daria Kasatkina but instead crashed 6-1 7-5 to the Russian-born 17th seed who now represents Australia.
'I was ready for a difficult match,' said Kasatkina, who can expect another big test against Andreeva next.
'I knew if she got a chance, she would take it straight away. That's what happened in the second set. This is where things got tight. But I'm really proud of myself and how I handled the situation.'
Three-time champion
Novak Djokovic
takes on qualifier Filip Misolic in Saturday's evening session, seeking his 99th match victory at Roland Garros.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


RTÉ News
4 hours ago
- RTÉ News
Carlos Alcaraz conquers frustration to find way past Ben Shelton
Carlos Alcaraz admitted Ben Shelton was driving him "mad" before dispatching the big-serving American to continue his march towards back-to-back French Open titles. The Spaniard dropped the third set but still collected his 100th Tour level clay-court win, 7-6 (10-8) 6-3 4-6 6-4. "Honestly, today I fought against myself in the mind. I just tried to calm myself - in some moments I was mad," he said. "I was angry with myself, talking not good things. I'm happy that I didn't let that thought play against me. "I tried to calm myself and tried to keep going. That's what I tried. "Every time we face each other we bring the level to the top. We entertained the people. He is a really powerful player. He can make any shots. "I think we played really great tennis. Drops, coming to the net, big shots, and we stayed there in the whole match. For me, it is great having Ben around, a great energy for tennis and for the people. I love watching him play." Alcaraz will face another American, 12th seed Tommy Paul, in the quarter-final.


Irish Times
5 hours ago
- Irish Times
Poland heading for political uncertainty after presidential election run-off
Poland is heading for a period of political uncertainty after Sunday's presidential run-off ended in a photo finish. Early projections suggested a gap of just 70,000 votes with a record turnout of nearly 73 per cent among Poland's 29 million registered voters. Pro- EU candidate Rafal Trzaskowski, backed by the ruling government of Donald Tusk , had the narrowest of leads after polls closed, with 50.3 per cent. Just 0.6 points behind him in the same TVP public broadcaster exit poll was Karol Nawrocki, backed by the opposition national conservative Law and Justice (PiS) party, polling 49.7 per cent. READ MORE A separate exit poll for private broadcaster TVN put the gap at just 0.3 points. With a margin of error in both polls of 2 per cent, the initial result was too close to call. Despite that, the government-backed Trzaskowski appeared minutes after polls closed to claim: 'We won, we did everything that could be done.' 'I will be the president of all Poles — of all Polish women and men,' he added. There was no hint of concession over in the rival camp, however, with Karol Nawrocki promising eventual victory to supporters who cheered 'President Narwocki Nawrocki' and 'We won'. 'This night will be ours yet,' he said. 'We managed to unite the patriotic camp in Poland, the camp of people who want a normal Poland without illegal immigrants.' Analysts say the final result, not likely until Monday, is likely to be decided by the non-resident vote – and possibly face challenge in the courts from the loser. In the first round, two weeks ago, Trzaskowski was shocked to finish just two points ahead – but took comfort from scoring six points higher among non-resident voters than his overall result. Meanwhile Nawrocki's popularity among the US Polish diaspora was 12 points above his final result, after he was endorsed by President Donald Trump during a White House visit. While Polish prime minister Donald Tusk remained silent on Sunday night, Nawrocki's leading backer, PiS leader Jaroslaw Kaczynski, praised his candidate for prevailing against a 'Niagara of lies' from rivals and the media. 'We have won because we are right,' he said, 'because we speak the truth about Poland, about its future, about its present and about all that's wrong in our country today.' Former president Bronislaw Komorowski compared the result to his win in 2010 with a five-point lead. 'Based on exit polls I had a guaranteed win, overnight the numbers changed several times but eventually I won,' he said. The vote reflects deep divisions in this country of almost 38 million and reflects the challenges ahead for Donald Tusk. The centrist-liberal pro-EU prime minister returned to power in December 2023 with a mandate to roll back PiS polices, from illegal court reforms to a near-ban on abortion. But the outgoing, PiS-allied outgoing president Andrzej Duda proved a strong adversary, vetoing key government legislation. Complicating Tusk's political day-to-day still further is his unwieldy coalition, including farmers and urban liberals, who have clashed over policies such as abortion liberalisation. Another term with a PiS-alled president, Tusk knows, would be a political disaster: hobbling his national legislative ambition, complicating EU relations and making a snap election likely. The tight result on Sunday revived doubts – and finger-pointing over Rafal Trzaskowski's suitability as a candidate, five years after his first failed attempt to take the presidency. Back then he ran as an opposition candidate, tapping into growing unhappiness with the then PiS government and its presidential incumbent. This time around he became a focus for voters frustrated with the Tusk administration. The 53-year-old Trzaskowski cut his political teeth as a teenage volunteer in Poland's first partially-free elections in 1989. As a multilingual political professional with a pro-EU and LGBT-supportive agenda, he was the perfect big-city liberal for PiS scare campaigns about shadowy elites in their rural, conservative heartland. Even among his own supporters in Warsaw, where Trzaskowski has served as mayor for seven years, he has a mixed reputation. One senior political ally accused Trzaskowski last night of running a 'lazy, arrogant campaign' with confused and contradictory messaging. At a mass rally in Warsaw a week ago Trzaskowski made his final pitch to voters as 'a president who unites, who is ready to talk to everyone'. But first-round analysis showed how his promises to push for an end to what he called Poland's 'medieval' abortion laws, and to introduce same-sex civil partnerships, put him beyond the pale for more conservative Poles in eastern and south-eastern regions. Here Karol Narowcki, a conservative historian and former amateur boxer, was by far the most popular candidate, presenting himself as the anti-elist defender of Polish identity and national interests. His campaign was hit by a series of scandals, over an undeclared second home and involvement in street fights, as well as allegations he denied about links to the Polish underworld and red-light scene.


The Irish Sun
6 hours ago
- The Irish Sun
Carlos Alcaraz stuns French Open fans with classy gesture as he wins rally but concedes point due to little-known rule
CARLOS ALCARAZ performed an incredible act of sportsmanship during his four-set French Open victory over Ben Shelton. The Spaniard, 22, is the reigning champion at 5 Carlos Alcaraz performed a rarely seen shot 5 The Spaniard contorted himself before launching his racquet towards the ball At 30-30 in the opening game of the second stanza, the two-time Wimbledon champion rushed towards the net following an approach shot to Shelton's backhand. The 13th seed punched his two-hander towards Alcaraz, who floated a forehand volley to the opposite corner. After shuttling nimbly across the back of the court , Shelton unleashed a sensational lefty passing shot. READ MORE IN TENNIS It initially appeared that Alcaraz had somehow gotten his racquet to the ball, sending it over the net for a winner. Shelton, 22, stood with his hands on his hips - astonished that Alcaraz had managed to dig out a winner. Not all was as it seemed, however, as the No2 seed immediately conceded the point to his opponent. While it initially appeared that Alcaraz had volleyed the ball before dropping his racquet, it turned out that he had in fact thrown it towards the ball, before it made contact. Most read in Tennis BEST ONLINE CASINOS - TOP SITES IN THE UK 5 Ben Shelton beamed as he embraced Alcaraz at the net Credit: Getty 5 Alcaraz spoke of his warm respect for his American opponent Credit: Shutterstock Editorial As this is not a legal shot, Alcaraz quickly confessed to what he had done and conceded the point to Shelton, bringing up a break opportunity in the process. When the umpire explained to the crowd what had happened, Alcaraz received applause from the Philippe Chatrier stands. Coco Gauff makes humiliating mistake as she walks on to French Open court without crucial equipment The crowd favourite went on to save SIX break points in that game, before finally holding serve. Alcaraz eventually took the match 7-6 6-4 4-6 6-4. At the end of the three hour and 22 minute battle, the two players shared a warm embrace at the net, both grinning after the entertaining spectacle. Speaking after the match, Alcaraz was full of praise for his opponent. The Murcia man said: "We both have huge respect for each other. "Every time we face each other, we bring a high level and play good tennis. He's a really powerful player and can make any shot… he's an unbelievable player. "We played complete tennis , big shots, coming to the net, big forehands… We stayed there during the whole match. For me, it's great having him around, it's a great energy ." Alcaraz will return to action on Tuesday, when he'll face Tommy Paul in the quarter-finals. 5 Alcaraz is a crowd favourite all over the world Credit: Getty