logo
Swiatek survives scare to reach French Open quarter-finals

Swiatek survives scare to reach French Open quarter-finals

France 245 days ago

The four-time holder of the Coupe Suzanne Lenglen displayed great resilience to win 1-6, 6-3, 7-5 in in two hours and 29 minutes on Court Philippe Chatrier.
Swiatek will next face Elina Svitolina for a spot in the semi-final, after the Ukrainian earlier saved three match points to eliminate last year's runner-up Jasmine Paolini.
After winning Roland Garros last year to complete a remarkable treble of clay-court victories in Madrid, Rome and Paris, the Pole's turbulent 2025 looked set to hit a new nadir as she found herself a set and a break down against the 12th-seeded Kazakh.
Following early exits at the Madrid and Italian Opens this season, Swiatek appeared to be headed for a similarly disappointing result at the tournament she has dominated since her first title in 2020.
"Well it was tough you know, first set I felt like I was playing against Jannik Sinner", said Swiatek.
"I needed to do something to get back in the game, but with her playing like that I didn't feel like I had much hope."
Rybakina hardly put a foot wrong in the first set as she raced into a 5-0 lead, with fifth seed Swiatek finally getting on the scoreboard after a lengthy service game before the world number 11 served out.
But the 24-year-old showed her fighting spirit to level up the second set after being broken in the first game by Rybakina.
She racked up double-faults on crucial points in the fifth game, but managed to secure a vital hold, which turned the tide of the match.
The five-time major winner then broke to love in the very next game, before forcing a decider.
Swiatek seized the advantage in the seventh game of the third set, but another untimely double-fault by the Pole in the next game restored parity.
At 5-5, Swiatek made her move as she broke Rybakina to 15, before holding for a gritty win.
Swiatek now holds a 5-4 head-to-head record over Rybakina, after claiming her first victory against the 25-year-old on the red dirt.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

'Too much risk': Musetti forced to abandon French Open semi-final
'Too much risk': Musetti forced to abandon French Open semi-final

France 24

timean hour ago

  • France 24

'Too much risk': Musetti forced to abandon French Open semi-final

Musetti had won the opening set against the second-seeded Spaniard but was obliged to call it quits when trailing 4-6, 7-6 (7/3), 6-0, 2-0 after suffering a thigh injury. "I felt at the beginning of the third (set) when I was serving, I start to, start losing a little bit of strength on the left leg behind, and definitely was going worse and worse, so I decided to stop," Musetti told his post-match press conference. "I think was, you know, the right decision to make, even if it was not what I wanted. "(I'm) really honestly sad and disappointed on how it ended, but still a great match so far." The abrupt ending was an unfortunate denouement to an intriguing battle between the rivals. Alcaraz had got the better of Musetti in their previous two meetings on clay this season -- in the final at Monte Carlo and the last four in Rome. But on Court Philippe Chatrier, only the finest of margins separated the pair through the opening two sets. "I think today that this probably the best match of these three matches that we played. I think today I was playing in the right way, and he was struggling sometimes," Musetti said. "At the end if I have to analyse those two sets, they were really, really great sets. Of course the third one and let's say the last two games, there was of course no chance to play at his level with this problem. "It was an unlucky situation." The Spaniard raced through the third set, with Musetti receiving treatment on his left thigh during a change of ends at 0-5 before being forced to quit three games later. "I start to feel like the beginning of the fourth that I couldn't go for the rallies, and I could not move like I was doing before," explained Musetti. "There was too much risk, you know, to take to go forward and to, you know, to be able to of course show something even for the crowd." The untimely injury brought a disappointing close to an otherwise excellent clay-court season for the world number seven as he reached at least the semi-finals of the three Masters-level tournaments, as well as Roland Garros. Looking forward to the upcoming grass-court season, the 2024 Wimbledon semi-finalist said: "It's too early to say... We are going to evaluate tomorrow what the exam will say, and we're gonna of course update you guys and take a decision for what's next." Musetti is due to play in the warm-up event at Queen's, which starts on June 16, before moving on to SW19 at the end of the month where he will be hoping to go one better than last year, if fit.

Reigning French Open champion Alcaraz through to final after Musetti retires with injury
Reigning French Open champion Alcaraz through to final after Musetti retires with injury

France 24

time3 hours ago

  • France 24

Reigning French Open champion Alcaraz through to final after Musetti retires with injury

Defending champion Carlos Alcaraz reached back-to-back French Open finals after Italian eighth seed Lorenzo Musetti retired with injury while trailing 4-6 7-6(3) 6-0 2-0 on Friday. 'It's never great to go through or win a match when it's like this,' said the 22-year-old, who has never lost a Grand Slam final. 'He's done an incredible clay season. I wish him all the best, a quick recovery and that he'll be back soon.' Alcaraz, who is attempting to become only the third man to retain his Roland Garros title this century after Rafa Nadal and Gustavo Kuerten, will face either world number one Jannik Sinner or 24-time Grand Slam champion Novak Djokovic in Sunday's final. Musetti twice denied Alcaraz the chance to break in the opening nine games before the 23-year-old suddenly dialled up the intensity and snatched the opening set when his Spanish opponent produced errors in a poor service game. A frustrated Alcaraz kicked his bench during the second set but finally found a way through Musetti's dogged defence to draw level after a tiebreak and then produced a dazzling display of power and precision to dish out a bagel in the third set. Musetti, who appeared to be hampered by a left thigh issue midway through the third set, threw in the towel after two games in the fourth.

French Open: Carlos Alcaraz advances to final after Lorenzo Musetti retires injured
French Open: Carlos Alcaraz advances to final after Lorenzo Musetti retires injured

LeMonde

time3 hours ago

  • LeMonde

French Open: Carlos Alcaraz advances to final after Lorenzo Musetti retires injured

Reigning champion Carlos Alcaraz reached the French Open final as Lorenzo Musetti retired injured from their last-four tie on Friday, June 6, ahead of world number one Jannik Sinner's clash with 24-time Grand Slam champion Novak Djokovic. World number two Alcaraz was leading 4-6, 7-6 (7/3), 6-0, 2-0 in the fourth set under the Court Philippe Chatrier roof when Italian Musetti called it quits due to an apparent thigh injury. "It's never great to go through or win a match when it's like this," said the 22-year-old, who has never lost a Grand Slam final. "He's done an incredible clay season. I wish him all the best, a quick recovery and that he'll be back soon." Alcaraz will aim to win his fifth Grand Slam title against either Sinner or Djokovic, who meet in the second semi-final on Sunday. He beat Sinner in five sets in last year's semi-finals, but has lost both of his meetings with Djokovic at Roland Garros – in the 2023 semis and last year's Paris Olympics final. "It's been three intense weeks and now I have one step to make," he said. "I'll give everything on Sunday, I've been playing great tennis this tournament." Musetti saved break points in the first and seventh games before grabbing a one-set lead with a break in the 10 th game. The duo traded breaks early in the second set, before Alcaraz secured a chance to serve it out and level the match. Instead, he was broken to 15 as Musetti produced some inspired shot-making to force a tie-break. The Spaniard raced through the breaker, though, taking his third set point when Musetti fired an attempted passing shot into the net. Alcaraz continued that momentum into the third, striking quickly to open up a 2-0 lead. Musetti could not deal with the power coming from the other side of the net and briefly received treatment on his left thigh. Alcaraz went on to romp through the set, in which eighth seed Musetti mustered only five points, in just 22 minutes. Musetti surrendered another break early in the fourth set as Alcaraz thumped a forehand return into the corner, and the 23-year-old immediately headed to the net to shake his opponent's hand.

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