
Zverev ends Popyrin's title defence
Alexander Zverev reached his 21st Masters 1000 semi-final on Monday by ending the Canadian title defence of Alexei Popyrin 6-7 (8/10), 6-4, 6-3 at the ATP Toronto Masters.
The final game, with Zverev serving at 5-3, was interrupted by shouts from an unruly fan who was tossed out by security.
The distraction ended a run of 14 consecutive points on serve, with the seed double-faulting once he was able to continue serving.
He finished off the evening with a sharp volley winner at the net on his first match point.
Zverev completed his 40th win of the year in just over two and a half hours.
The world number three won the tournament in 2017 but had not been past the quarter-finals in Canada since.
'After losing the first set, I had to tell myself we were both playing well,' the holder of seven Masters trophies said.
'I had one or two mistakes at the end of the first, but it was a high-level match.
'I felt that if I kept playing well, I would get my chances -- and I did. I can't complain about the second and third sets.'
Zverev will bid for the oddly scheduled Thursday final against three-time semi-finalist Karen Khachanov, who dismissed young American Alex Michelsen 6-4, 7-6 (7/3).
'It was a very close, competitive match,' Khachanov said.
'I had to come back from some tough situations. 'How you handle that mentally is important. I was glad to close it out in the second set.
'I had to try and not give him the opportunity to step in and attack; that's what I did today.' Zverev has won five of the seven matches he has played against Khachanov.
Popyrin and Zverev duelled throughout the evenly matched 71-minute opening set as it went into a tiebreaker.
Zverev was unable to convert on two winning chances, but Popyrin came good on his own second opportunity with a net cord winner that caught his opponent stranded at the baseline. The German began to turn the tables in the second set, taking a 4-1 lead only to see the Aussie level at 4-all.
Zverev pulled away to level the match at a set apiece, breaking for 6-4 as Popyrin sent a volley wide. The top seed began the final set with a 3-0 lead on his way into the tournament final four at the pre-US Open event.
Popyrin remains winless against Zverev after losing all four of their matches.

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


Daily Tribune
a day ago
- Daily Tribune
Sizzling Osaka to face Tauson in WTA Canadian Open semis
AFP | Montreal Four-time Grand Slam champion Naomi Osaka advanced to the semi-finals of the WTA Canadian Open on Tuesday with a comprhensive 6-2, 6-2 triumph over 10th seed Elina Svitolina. Osaka, chasing her first WTA Tour-level title since the 2021 Australian Open, needed only 68 minutes to dispatch the Ukraine star and book a semi-final with Danish 16th seed Clara Tauson, who stunned reigning Australian Open champion Madison Keys 6-1, 6-4. 'I'm just having a lot of fun playing. I'm glad to be here,' Osaka said. 'I think I'll be seeded in the US Open because I won my match. That was a really good goal for me. I'm just really excited.' Tauson dedicated her victory to her late grandfather, who died on Sunday as the Dane was dispatching Polish second seed Iga Swiatek, who won her sixth Grand Slam title last month at Wimbledon. 'Two days ago, my grandfather unfortunately passed away so I really wanted to win for him today,' a tearful Tauson said after beating US sixth seed Keys. 'I was told the day after I beat Iga so I really wanted to come out and show my best tennis for him. Hopefully he's watching.' The US Open hardcourt tuneup in Montreal is the first event where Tauson has beaten two top-10 foes, with Swiatek and Keys exiting at her hand. Tauson dominated the opening set and took full advantage of Keys giving up a break on a double fault to open the second. The Dane won 12 of 19 points on her second serves and kept Keys at bay most of the night. Keys joined a scrap heap of Montreal seeds, with the top five seeds and seven of the top 10 seeds ousted before the quarter-finals. Tauson, 22, seeks her fourth career WTA title after the 2021 Lyon and Luxenbourg Opens and this year's Auckland Open, where Osaka retired after winning the first set of the final in their only WTA meeting. 'She's really tough,' Osaka said of Tauson. 'I played her in Auckland this year. I had to stop halfway because I was injured. So I'm really excited that I'm healthy.' First title as a mom? Osaka seeks her eighth WTA-level title, and her first since a maternity leave comeback last year. She last won a WTA-level title below the Grand Slams at the 2019 China Open. Osaka broke for a 3-1 edge in the opening set and exchanged breaks in the last three games to capture the set after 38 minutes, then cruised through the second set , taking the triumph when Svitolina hit a forehand wide. Tauson is one win away from her second WTA 1000 final, having lost the first in February at Dubai to Mirra Andreeva. The Dane dominated Keys in the first set, breaking in the fourth and sixth games, and Keys double faulted away another break to begin the second set. Tauson held from there to win, never facing a break point in the second set before holding at love in the last game to end matters after 70 minutes. Elena Rybakina, the 2022 Wimbled on champion, and 18-yearold Canadian sensation Victoria Mboko will meet in the other semi-final.


Daily Tribune
a day ago
- Daily Tribune
A wheelbarrow of potatoes for Danish football's man of the match
French footballer Maxime Soulas's prize for his manof-the-match award in the Danish first division did not go down like a sack of potatoes -- more like a wheelbarrow's worth. After performing when the chips were down by opening the scoring for Sonderjyske in their 3-2 win against Nordsjaelland on Sunday, Soulas received 55 kilograms of the tasty tubers, the 26-year-old defender told AFP on Tuesday. 'I gave the potatoes to my club's cafeteria, and they donated some to a soup kitchen,' he said. It marks the first time the man of the match can eat his award for his post-match supper. 'The sponsor of the match decides on the reward. He found it funny and now the story's gone round the world,' said the club's communications director, Jacob Ravn. Originally from Montpellier in southern France, Soulas came to Denmark in 2020 to play for Amager in the capital Copenhagen, before joining recently promoted Sonderjyske in 2021. Before that he played his football in the Netherlands.


Daily Tribune
a day ago
- Daily Tribune
Fritz, Shelton power into Toronto semis
AFP | Toronto second seed Taylor Fritz overcame a late niggle while serving for the match on Tuesday to beat Andrey Rublev 6-3, 7-6 (7/4) and reach the ATP Toronto Masters semi-finals. The American claimed his place in a fifth semi-final of the season after losing serve while trying to close out what had been looking like a quick win, finally coming through into the last four at this level for the first time after 83 minutes. The Californian will play for a spot in the Thursday final when he takes on fourth seed Ben Shelton, who won a Masters quarter-final on his fourth attempt, defeating Australian Alex de Minaur 6-3, 6-4. Shelton laid down 11 aces in his 91-minute victory and dominated on rallies longer than nine shots. The result ended a seven - match win streak for last week's Washington champion de Minaur. 'I'm really happy with that performance. It showed mental toughness from start to fini s h ,' S h e l t o n said. 'This win gives me a lot of confidence, I'm excited about the semi-final. 'People often just see me as a server, not much of a grinder, but when I go into lockdown mode and put a lot of balls onto the court, it surprises guys sometimes. 'Winning longer rallies is all part of my evolution.' Shelton set up three match points with his final ace and needed only one chance to emerge the winner. Fritz admitted he was struck by brain freeze as he served for victory leading a set and 5-4. After saving three break points he put a return into the net for 5-all as Rublev held on. 'That game was so shaky for me, we had both been holding serve easily, everything felt calm and chill,' he said. 'It came out of nowhere, the pressure of that game. It was tight and my brain just turned off. 'The only thing to do is to come back and try to win the set. That's what is able to make it all feel not as bad.' Fritz did just that, closing out the win 15 minutes later in the second-set tiebreaker with a serve winner. Fritz struck a personal-best 20 aces (for three-set matches) among his 29 winners. He now stands 6-4 over Rublev. The American has now won 19 of his last 22 matches including reaching the Wimbledon semi-finals.