logo
Home favourite Arthur Fils defies injury to win wild French Open rollercoaster

Home favourite Arthur Fils defies injury to win wild French Open rollercoaster

Independent5 days ago

French 14th seed Arthur Fils defied a back injury and revealed he was inspired by idol Gael Monfils as he battled to defeat Spain's Jaume Munar in five sets and keep home hopes alive at Roland Garros.
Fils looked to be a in a comfortable position when he took the first two sets on tiebreaks on Court Suzanne-Lenglen but then struggled with his movement as Munar fought back.
The Spaniard rolled through the fourth set without dropping a game and was then a break up in the fifth, but Fils staged a dramatic comeback to win 7-6 7-6 2-6 0-6 6-4 in almost four and a half hours.
Fils, who had looked to be on the brink of retirement, also faced three break points at 4-4 0-40 in the fifth set but saved them all to hold in a nine-minute game before breaking Munar to win the match.
The 20-year-old Fils is the highest-ranked French player in the Roland Garros draw and is now through to the third round of the French Open for the first time in his career.
He celebrated winning a wild fifth set by ripping off his shirt on Suzanne-Lenglen in front of the raucous home crowd .
And Fils then revealed he had been inspired by the popular 38-year-old French veteran Monfils, who came from two sets down in his opening match of the tournament, as he has done throughout his career.
'I was in the five set and I was thinking of Gael,' Fils said on court. 'Gael had to turn around a lot of matches in five sets. So I thought, Arthur, this is yours. You have to do the same. Go for it.'
He continued: 'I don't really have a lot of words. It's thanks to you guys. Even if I was leading two sets to zero... I knew it was very physical. I entered the 2nd set tiebreak not feeling very well.
'But I told myself that it's a 5 set match. Even if you lose the next two sets, there's always a 5th set. I said that to my box. That I'll focus on the 5th set and we'll see what happens. It all went well in the end.'
Fils will play either 17th seed Andrey Rublev or Australia's Adam Walton in the third round, and could face World No 1 Jannik Sinner in the fourth round.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

The TikTok dance and irony at heart of Iga Swiatek and Aryna Sabalenka's rivalry
The TikTok dance and irony at heart of Iga Swiatek and Aryna Sabalenka's rivalry

The Independent

time27 minutes ago

  • The Independent

The TikTok dance and irony at heart of Iga Swiatek and Aryna Sabalenka's rivalry

The match-up the French Open had been waiting for came before the tournament began: Iga Swiatek and Aryna Sabalenka, the two rivals who have grappled over the World No 1 position for the past three years, met on the practice courts at Roland Garros and played a set. Two weeks later, they will meet again in the semi-finals, a blockbuster booked between the defending champion Swiatek and the biggest contender for her throne, the top seed Sabalenka. With eight grand slam titles between them, it will be the first time they have met at this level since the 2022 US Open. Swiatek, who has five of those grand slam titles to Sabalenka's three, kept her cards close to her chest when discussing their practice session on the eve of Roland Garros. Sabalenka was more revealing as she opened up on their relationship and how it had become warmer since collaborating on a TikTok at last year's WTA Finals in Riyadh. It had been icy. 'Before it wasn't any communication, any practices with her,' Sabalenka said. 'But now we are getting better, we get along better, and we practice more often. We know each other quite well.' The timing of the TikTok in question, which saw Sabalenka and Swiatek dance on court before cutting to a behind-the scenes shot of the glamourous WTA Finals photoshoot, came when Sabalenka was in the ascendency. She had added the US Open to her two Australian Open titles and reclaimed the No 1 ranking from Swiatek. 'We've had a lot of great battles in the past,' Sabalenka said. The majority have come when Swiatek has been on top and Sabalenka has been chasing. Swiatek has tended to win them, too. The 24-year-old is the only player in the world's top 10 to boast a winning record against Sabalenka, defeating the Belarusian in eight of their 12 meetings. That includes their classic Madrid Open final in 2024, a three-hour, 11-minute epic on the clay won by Swiatek 7-5 4-6 7-6 (7) - in a contest that was later named the WTA's match of the year. Swiatek consolidated that victory with another win over Sabalenka in the Rome final before winning her third straight Roland Garros title, her supremacy on clay undisputed. It has felt different in 2025, given the doubts over Swiatek's form coming into Roland Garros. Swiatek has not won a title or reached a final since last year's French Open and, in her absence, Sabalenka marched back to Madrid and reclaimed the title by defeating Coco Gauff in the final. The 27-year-old is well positioned to contend for Roland Garros and the mental transformation Sabalenka underwent to win her first grand slam title in Australia in 2023 came after Swiatek's win over her in the US Open semi-finals. She is a different player now. Sabalenka can overpower and dominate the rest of the field to the extent that her consistency and reliability across all surfaces is underappreciated. This year's French Open has been a typical tournament for the new Sabalenka, reaching the quarter-finals without dropping a set. Her victory over Zheng marked her 10th consecutive grand slam in which she has reached the quarter-finals, discounting the Wimbledon missed last summer due to injury. 'They are crazy stats,' Sabalenka said. They are becoming normal. As is Swiatek's record in Paris, with the Pole extending her winning streak at Roland Garros to 26 wins in a row after overcoming Elina Svitolina in the quarter-finals. Chris Evert's record of 29 straight wins is in sight. More and more, it seems as if the defining result of Swiatek's week may be her comeback against Elena Rybakina in the fourth round, winning in three and after being a set and a break down early in the second. 'I think I needed that kind of win,' she said at the time. Swiatek found how to win when it wasn't going her way. The four-time French Open champion will need that spirit when he faces Sabalenka, given her tendency to start quickly and establish control in the match by attacking any second serves. It's rare for Swiatek to have a target when she takes to Philippe-Chatrier, given her record there, but playing the World No 1 gives her one. 'I don't know if she elevates my game but for sure our rivalry is pushing both of us,' Swiatek said. 'It's not only about the level of tennis. It's about everything, how we work, and how professional we are.' And this is a semi-final that can elevate the French Open, too. The controversy over unequal scheduling between men's and women's tournaments has continued this year, with organisers doubling down on their decision to schedule men's matches in the primetime slot, leaving the women with the earlier starts. On Wednesday, Sabalenka faced Olympic champion Qinwen Zheng in a high-quality quarter-final that started at 11am and in front of thousands of empty seats. 'I definitely agree that we deserve to be put in a bigger stage,' Sabalenka said when pushed on the inequality of the scheduling. 'Better timing, more people watching.' There will perhaps be an irony to the fact that the French Open gets to stage the rivalry that the rest of the grand slams have been waiting years to see.

Lorenzo Musetti escapes French Open disqualification after kicking ball at line judge
Lorenzo Musetti escapes French Open disqualification after kicking ball at line judge

The Independent

time42 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Lorenzo Musetti escapes French Open disqualification after kicking ball at line judge

Lorenzo Musetti escaped being disqualified from the French Open after accidentally kicking a ball at a line judge during this quarter-final win over Frances Tiafoe. The Italian progressed to his first Roland Garros semi-final after beating Tiafoe in four sets and will play either Carlos Alcaraz or Tommy Paul on Friday for a place in the final. But the eighth seed had a fortunate escape during his contest with Tiafoe where Musetti risked being defaulted from the tournament when he struck a line judge by volleying the ball with his foot. Musetti, who had lost the previous point on serve and was down 3-5 in the second set, was receiving balls from a ball boy when he dropped one of them behind the baseline as he faced the back of the court. Instead of reaching down to catch it, the 23-year-old decided to swing his left foot at the ball, kicking it on the half-volley. The ball unintentionally struck the line judge in the chest and when he realised his mistake, Musetti moved towards her before holding his racket up in a gesture of apology. Musetti received a warning for unsportsmanlike conduct from the chair umpire but no further action was taken, with the Italian going on to win 6-2 4-6 7-5 6-2 and reach the semi-finals. The incident had similarities to when Novak Djokovic was disqualified from the US Open in 2020 for mistakenly striking a line judge in the throat when he hit a ball towards the back of the court. Djokovic was defaulted by tournament officials following a lengthy on-court after taking a ball from his pocket and hitting it behind him with his racket, hitting the female line judge in the throat. On TNT Sports, Tim Henman, who was disqualified from a Wimbledon men's doubles match in 1995 when he accidentally hit a ball girl in the head, said Musetti had taken a huge risk. The former British No 1 said: 'By the letter of the law, if you hit or kick a ball away in frustration and it hits a ball boy or a line judge or the umpire, that can be a disqualification. 'When you look at that, the umpire could have interpreted that as a disqualification. However, if Musetti was disqualified for that I think he would have felt very unlucky and very aggrieved. 'But when you kick the ball away, you've either got to be a better footballer and hit it in the right direction or you are risking something like that.'

Maestro Musetti carves Tiafoe win to reach French Open semi-finals
Maestro Musetti carves Tiafoe win to reach French Open semi-finals

Reuters

timean hour ago

  • Reuters

Maestro Musetti carves Tiafoe win to reach French Open semi-finals

PARIS, June 3 (Reuters) - Italian craftsman Lorenzo Musetti used his full palette of shots to decorate Court Philippe Chatrier with blistering baseline winners, beating American Frances Tiafoe 6-2 4-6 7-5 6-2 to reach the French Open semi-finals for the first time on Tuesday. Despite a few muddled moments, the world number seven set up a meeting with either defending champion Carlos Alcaraz or Tommy Paul of the U.S. as he continues his renaissance after some soul searching. Musetti, who said he put some order in his mind and game, did not let frustration take the best of him after losing the second set and once he found his groove, there was no stopping him as 15th seed Tiafoe gradually lost the plot, twice arguing with the chair umpire over line calls. He bowed out with yet another routine shot into the net, his 'Big Foe' neck chain dripping with sweat as a testimony of the battle just fought. "Definitely Frances did not start the way he wanted but today was really complicated, it was so windy and difficult to mange to properly hit the ball," said Musetti, the only man to reach at least the semi-finals of every main claycourt event this season. "The third set was a fight and even if I was a little tired I found the extra energy to win this set and the last set was probably the best set of this match." Musetti is one of the rare top players using the single-handed backhand, a vintage shot often praised by tennis connoisseurs. "We are Italian, we are elegant," he joked. "Joke aside, I have a little bit of a retro style." Earlier, and in front of mostly empty seats around lunchtime four-time champion Iga Swiatek, looking to become the first woman in the professional era to win the title four times in a row, beat Elina Svitolina 6-1 7-5 to set up a clash with world number one Aryna Sabalenka for a place in Saturday's final. The Belarusian ended Olympic champion Zheng Qinwen's 10-match winning streak at Roland Garros with a 7-6(3) 6-3 victory to advance. With the main arena finally almost full, Musetti got off to a strong start, his heavy top spin proving tough to handle for Tiafoe, who dropped serve in the second game. The Italian, however, was not completely flawless and he faced a break point at 4-2, which he saw off thanks to his mesmerizing backhand. He sealed the opening set on his opponent's serve when Tiafoe's volley sailed wide. Musetti's game, however, needed some fine-tuning and Tiafoe jumped on the occasion to bank on errors here and there to snatch an early break in the second set. He held serve throughout to level the contest as Musetti seemed to struggle adjusting to the windy conditions on Court Philippe Chatrier. Musetti dug deep in the third and played a near-perfect game on Tiafoe's serve to surge 2-1 ahead. A modest second serve met Musetti's powerful crosscourt return and after trading heavy topspin shots, Tiafoe attempted a crafty drop shot, but the Italian charged forward for a clinical backhand winner on the baseline. The fourth set looked more like a post-match cool-down for Musetti, who would not be distracted by Tiafoe's antics.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store