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Carlos Alcaraz to defend French Open title in final as Lorenzo Musetti retires

Carlos Alcaraz to defend French Open title in final as Lorenzo Musetti retires

Glasgow Timesa day ago

Italian Musetti won the first set and was playing some exquisite tennis under the roof on Court Philippe-Chatrier.
But the 23-year-old had treatment on his leg during a one-sided third set and called it a day after Alcaraz won nine games in a row with the score 4-6 7-6 (3) 6-0 2-0.
Lorenzo Musetti needed medical treatment (Aurelien Morissard/AP)
There were echoes of a match here four years ago when Musetti retired against Novak Djokovic at 4-0 down in the fifth, later saying he was not injured but that he quit because he was 'not able to win a point'.
Alcaraz, who will bid for a fifth grand slam title on Sunday, said: 'It is never great getting through like this.
'Lorenzo is a great player. He has had an incredible clay season. He's one of the few players who has achieved the semi-finals. I wish him all the best and a quick recovery.
'The first two sets were really tough. I had chances to break his serve in the match and I couldn't make the most of it.
'He was playing great tennis. When I won the second set, there was relief. In the third I knew what I had to do – pushing him to the limit and trying to be aggressive.
'I was more calm and I could see this more clearly and I could play great tennis.'
An exciting match looked on the cards when at 5-4 Musetti, who had not previously threatened the Alcaraz serve, suddenly broke to take the first set.
Alcaraz served for the second set but the tension he was feeling was palpable as Musetti broke straight back.
A sad ending to a thrilling encounter 💔
Alcaraz is back in the Roland-Garros final as Musetti is forced to retire. #RolandGarros pic.twitter.com/n5EZsDTroS
— Roland-Garros (@rolandgarros) June 6, 2025
However, Alcaraz reset in the tie-break and, although Musetti saved two set points, he dumped a third into the net.
Musetti planted his hand onto his face after a bad miss handed the initiative to Alcaraz, who grabbed the early break in the third.
Suddenly the shackles were off for Alcaraz while Musetti was labouring, winning just five points as the set disappeared over the horizon.
The eighth seed had received treatment on his left leg but was still clearly hindered and when Alcaraz broke for 2-0 in the fourth, he decided he had had enough.

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