
French Open semi-finals Live Updates: Carlos Musetti vs Lorenzo Alcaraz underway
Carlos Alcaraz and Lorenzo Musetti have stepped out on Court Philippe-Chatrier, and we are not far from action.
The atmosphere is electric, and the players pose for pictures with the ball boys.
This has all the makings of a classic: Musetti vs Alcaraz in the semis 💥#RolandGarros pic.twitter.com/R5hUFRvTf7
— Roland-Garros (@rolandgarros) June 6, 2025
Carlos Alcaraz and Lorenzo Musetti have faced each other six times on the tour since they first met in the Hamburg Final back in 2022.
Alcaraz have a 5-1 lead over his Italian opponent and is also on a five-match winning streak against Musetti.
The duo have met in Grand Slams only once, where Alcaraz beat Musetti 6-3, 6-2, 6-2 in the Round of 16 at Roland Garros.
After Coco Gauff and Aryna Sabalenka set up an ultimate showdown in the women's singles, it's time for the men's singles on Friday.
Defending champion Carlos Alcaraz will lock horns with Italy's Lorenzo Musetti in the first semi-final at Court Philippe Chatrier from 6 PM IST, local time 2:30 PM onwards.
Thereafter, the match between Novak Djokovic and Jannik Sinner will lock horns in the second semis. The match won't start not before 10:30 PM IST, 7:00 PM local time.
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The Hindu
an hour ago
- The Hindu
Alcaraz set for 'great' French Open final against Sinner after Musetti abandons
Carlos Alcaraz promised a spectacular Roland Garros final against top seed Jannik Sinner after the reigning champion advanced past an injured Lorenzo Musetti in the last four on Friday. The Spaniard was leading 4-6, 7-6 (7/3), 6-0, 2-0 after two hours and 25 minutes of play on Court Philippe Chatrier when eighth seed Musetti was forced to abandon with a thigh issue. Second seed Alcaraz will defend his crown against world number one Sinner, after the Italian dashed Djokovic's latest tilt at a 25th Grand Slam with a straight-sets victory in Friday's second semi-final. It will be the first time the pair meet in the final of a major. "It's going to be a really great Sunday, I think, for the fans of tennis," the 22-year-old said. "Jannik, he's the best tennis player right now. I mean, he's destroying every opponent through (to) the semi-final," he added of the three-time Grand Slam winner, who is yet to drop a set in the tournament. When the dust settles on Court Philippe Chatrier on Sunday, the past six Grand Slam titles will have been shared between the two new dominant forces of the men's game. Alcaraz bested Sinner in five sets in the semi-final on his way to the title at Roland Garros in 2024, and he beat the 23-year-old last month in the Italian Open final as Sinner made his return from a three-month doping suspension. Four-time Grand Slam champion Alcaraz has emerged the victor in the last four meetings between the current top two-ranked players in the world, and leads their series 7-4 overall. 'Speedy recovery' With Musetti's forced retirement in Paris, Alcaraz moved into his second French Open showpiece match, and fifth major final overall. He now leads the 23-year-old 6-1 in their head-to-head series, winning all three of their clay-court battles this season after victories in the final at Monte Carlo and semi-finals of the Italian Open. Both players battled through an even opener, before Musetti pounced at 5-4 on Alcaraz's serve, setting up the break opportunity at the start of the game with a powerful crosscourt forehand winner to conclude a brutal baseline exchange. The pair exchanged consecutive breaks early in the second set. The Monte Carlo and Rome champion got ahead again in the 11th game, but Musetti immediately hit back to force a tie-break. Alcaraz was not to be denied however as he dominated the breaker, eventually levelling the match at the third time of asking as Musetti netted a forehand on the run. Now firmly in the ascendancy, Alcaraz pressed his advantage by racing through the third set in 22 minutes for the loss of just five points. Musetti received a massage on his left thigh during the change-over while trailing 0-5 in the third frame, before signalling that he was unable to continue three games later. "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," explained Musetti. It was an unfortunate end to an otherwise excellent clay-court season for the Carrara-native as he reached at least the semi-finals of the three Masters-level tournaments, as well as Roland Garros. "It's not the way that I want to win, to make the final," said Alcaraz. "The clay season for him has been unbelievable, the level he has reached is pretty high. "I just wished him, you know, speedy recovery. I hope to see him soon, you know, on court again, enjoying his tennis again. He's gonna reach these rounds, and he's going to fight for finals and Grand Slam, I'm sure about it."


Hindustan Times
an hour ago
- Hindustan Times
Soccer-Italy rocked in Oslo as Spalletti hints at crisis talks
June 6 - Coach Luciano Spalletti admitted Italy are going through a difficult patch after their humbling loss in Norway and said he would speak with the Italian Football Federation about the situation. Italy have not reached a World Cup since 2014 — a painful drought for a nation that once stood proudly among football's elite with four world titles to their name. With an abysmal start to the qualifying campaign, after being dominated by Norway in a 3-0 loss in Oslo on Friday, Spalletti is already under pressure. His side were constantly punished by a Norwegian team that dominated on the counterattack and they were clearly second best on a rainy night at Ullevaal Stadium. "We need a bit more enthusiasm, as individuals. We need to add something more, otherwise something has got to change," Spalletti told reporters. "This is not who we are, because in terms of individuals, we can do more, but you can also see this is a difficult moment. A few things did happen to us, but this is the squad I chose and will continue with," he added. When asked about his position as the manager of the Italian national team, Spalletti admitted that there would be difficult conversation coming up with the FIGC. "I need to talk to President Gravina about their intentions, their view on the decision I make," Spalletti said. "I chose this group because I thought there was quality, but if we are so fragile that we don't keep an offside trap, we don't chase down opponents, then there is a lack of confidence. "Quality isn't enough without that." Spalletti was also asked if he is worried that the World Cup might be already out of reach after the Norway loss. "There are always worries, because after a performance like that, you clearly have to ask yourself questions and realise there are problems, but you have to face them, because there is no other possibility," he said.


Hindustan Times
2 hours ago
- Hindustan Times
Tennis-Sinner says rivalry with Alcaraz just the tonic sport needs
PARIS, - Jannik Sinner believes his battle for supremacy with fellow French Open finalist Carlos Alcaraz could become the defining rivalry of their era and is something the sport needs with its golden generation of players calling time on their careers. Sinner beat Novak Djokovic 6-4 7-5 7-6 in a generational battle on Court Philippe Chatrier to deny his Serbian opponent a record 25th Grand Slam and leave him unsure whether he will ever return to Roland Garros, where he has won three major trophies. The 23-year-old Italian, who is seeking his fourth Grand Slam title, booked a mouth-watering meeting with his main rival Carlos Alcaraz, who will aim to retain his crown at Roland Garros and add a fifth major crown to his trophy cabinet. With Djokovic now the only active member of tennis' Big Four that also included Roger Federer, Rafa Nadal and Andy Murray and yielded a collective 69 major titles in more than two decades, Sinner sensed an opportunity for himself and Alcaraz. "It takes time to compare us with the Big Three or Big Four, no? Only time can tell, to be honest," Sinner told reporters. "For sure, from my point of view, he's a player who makes me a better player. He pushes me to the limit. We try to understand where we have to improve, for the next times I play against him. "I believe that tennis or every sport needs rivalries. This could be potentially one of them, but there are amazing players coming up. There can be so many different and other players joining or one drops. You never know." Sunday's clash on Court Philippe Chatrier will mark only the 12th time that Sinner and Alcaraz have faced off, with the 22-year-old Spaniard looking for a fifth straight victory over his opponent to successfully defend his title. Djokovic said the pair would have to keep going to match the rivalry that he had with Federer, Nadal and Murray. "At the moment, that's hard, because they need to play against each for at least 10-plus years non-stop in order to be part of the same discussion," Djokovic added. "But they're definitely great for tennis, both of them. I think their rivalry is something our sport needs." Sinner said he and Alcaraz had a similar aura and could get more fans interested in the sport. "He's a player with charisma, with that aura," Sinner said. "The moment he steps on court, you can feel his presence. In the end, that's exactly what tennis needs. The more people like that, the more players like that, the better. "In the end, it's exactly those players who bring people closer to the sport and make them want to watch tennis."