logo
Cameron Norrie out of French Open after convincing defeat to Novak Djokovic

Cameron Norrie out of French Open after convincing defeat to Novak Djokovic

The British number three, in the fourth round for the first time, needed treatment on a foot injury during a painful straight-sets defeat.
Norrie was playing his biggest match since the 2022 Wimbledon semi-final, which he also lost to Djokovic.
He did at least grab a set that day, but in Paris the 29-year-old was emphatically swept aside 6-2 6-3 6-2, a sixth career defeat in six meetings with the Serbian.
Novak Djokovic is still in the hunt for a fourth title in Paris (Thibault Camus/AP)
Norrie had gone into the match buoyed by what he self-deprecatingly called the 'vintage, seven out of 10 tennis' he has been playing.
But he did not even hit those modest highs as Djokovic eased to the first set.
At the changeover Djokovic needed treatment on the blister that flared up during his second-round win over Corentin Moutet.
It could not have been bothering him that much, however, as he had been partying with Paris St Germain's players at their Champions League parade the night before.
'Maybe he's not that concerned about playing Cam Norrie,' was the damning assessment of TNT Sports expert and former British number one Tim Henman.
Strong start from Nole ✨
Djokovic takes the first 6-2 over Norrie! #RolandGarros pic.twitter.com/0czpiA7Sl2
— Roland-Garros (@rolandgarros) June 2, 2025
The celebrations even spilled over to Court Philippe-Chatrier, with PSG star Ousmane Dembele bringing out the European Cup before the match – which is the closest Norrie will get to a trophy this fortnight.
Djokovic, meanwhile, still has designs on a fourth Roland Garros title, and a record 25th grand slam crown.
His level briefly dipped at the start of the second set to give up a break, but that advantage was swiftly snuffed out.
Norrie then needed his medical time-out after seeming to tweak something in his foot, before he was promptly broken as Djokovic moved two sets up.
Another poor service game from Norrie gave Djokovic a foothold in the third and the 38-year-old duly wrapped up a comfortable win in a little over two hours.
Cam Norrie is defeated by Novak Djokovic in Paris
But what a run it's been for Cam, backing up his Geneva semi-final with a first appearance in week two of @rolandgarros 👏#BackTheBrits 🇬🇧 | #RolandGarros pic.twitter.com/CJ6GWHqWv1
— LTA (@the_LTA) June 2, 2025
Still, it has been a successful campaign for Norrie, who should find himself back in the world's top 60 ahead of the grass season, having dipped as low as 91 following a rough couple of years.
'It was for me a really enjoyable clay season,' he said. 'I think I played 20 clay-court matches, and for me that's huge.
'Really, the way for me to take confidence is playing matches and then actually getting through some tough matches. I won a lot of tie-breaks recently, so I can take so much confidence and momentum from this.'
In the quarter-finals, Djokovic will face German third seed Alexander Zverev, who came through against Tallon Griekspoor after the Dutchman retired injured in the second set.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

‘People don't know this' – Michael Owen breaks silence on ‘well done he's 13' meme 26 years on from humiliating teenager
‘People don't know this' – Michael Owen breaks silence on ‘well done he's 13' meme 26 years on from humiliating teenager

The Sun

time29 minutes ago

  • The Sun

‘People don't know this' – Michael Owen breaks silence on ‘well done he's 13' meme 26 years on from humiliating teenager

IT IS probably the cringiest moment from Michael Owen's long list. But now he has broken his silence on the infamous "well done, he's 13" gag from Neville Southall. 6 6 Owen featured in a Michael Owen Soccer Skills video in 1999 where he faced a young goalkeeper at an empty Stoke City stadium. The former England striker did his best to humiliate the 13-year-old Jamie Hutchinson, who was given goalkeeping tips from Southall. To his credit, Hutchinson did make some saves. But the video is remembered for Owen chipping, rounding and firing past the helpless child between the sticks - before shamelessly celebrating each finish. The laughing ex-Liverpool man clenched his fists, ran away with his arms aloft, mocked the goalkeeper for nutmegging him and pointed to his name on the back of his shirt. But it was his embarrassing shout of "get in there - game, set and match, Owen" that triggered Southall's brilliant quip. Southall said: "Well done, he's 13," a comment which remains a viral sensation and etched into British football heritage. But now, 26 years on, Owen has opened up on the clip - and revealed not all was quite as it seemed because he was told to play up for the cameras. He told talkSPORT: "I was only a couple of years older than him myself!. It's probably funny now. 'I got back from the World Cup in 98 and there were loads of commercial opportunities, things like that. Virgil van Dijk 'destroys' Michael Owen with brutal 13-word put-down on live TV after Liverpool beat Everton 'I was asked to do a soccer skills video and a soccer skills book. So I had to explain, talk through finishing, volleying, heading, whatever the skill was. Inevitably, you need a goalkeeper there. 'I never picked them and so I turned up to do the show and to talk through how I see scoring a goal and what I think in certain scenarios and whatever. 'There was a kid in goal that I had to score past and when I scored they're like, 'Come on, no, you need to show a bit more animation. Like celebrate when you score, this is going on a video.'" talkSPORT host Andy Goldstein clarified: "So people don't know this, right?" And Owen continued: "People just laugh at you no matter what. Then they take a little extract of anything. 'There's loads of things like that on the internet on me.' 'NOT EXACTLY IDEAL' Hutchinson spoke about the viral video in 2016 and admitted he knew it would not come out too well for him. He said: 'Being the goalkeeper on a programme headlined by a striker wasn't exactly ideal for me. 'It was made clear that it wouldn't make good filming if the goalkeeper was saving all the shots taken by the other kids after they had been coached by Michael.' And even Southall himself did defend Owen's actions earlier this year. The 92-cap Wales goalkeeper - who reunited with Hutchinson a few years ago - added: "I think he was being ironic to be fair, but I think he was enjoying himself and being ironic. 'But the poor kid, he scored a squillion goals past him and I was thinking 'give him a break'. 'On the day, Michael was okay and he's always okay. 'People judge him on that and that's not him." 6 6 6

Rivalry gathers momentum as Alcaraz and Sinner contest first major final
Rivalry gathers momentum as Alcaraz and Sinner contest first major final

The Guardian

time31 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

Rivalry gathers momentum as Alcaraz and Sinner contest first major final

Towards the final stretch of the big three's unprecedented period of dominance of the ATP tour, as it became clear that Roger Federer, Rafael Nadal and Novak Djokovic would all sequentially vacate their thrones, the future of men's tennis was clouded in uncertainty. Although there was a talented, competitive generation of players born in the 1990s waiting to take their place, the gulf in quality between them was significant. For a short time, it seemed like the men's side of the draw could open up and provide opportunities for any top player brave enough to take them. The past fortnight in Paris has again underlined how Jannik Sinner and Carlos Alcaraz have emphatically shut the door on this prospect. As they prepare to face each other in a grand slam final for the first time in their careers at Roland Garros on Sunday, it will mark the sixth consecutive grand slam that has been won by either Sinner, the world No 1, and the world No 2 Alcaraz. From the start of the tournament, it felt inevitable that they would face each other in the championship match. Their first grand slam final also represents the first major final between two players born in the 2000s. Dominic Thiem's victory over Alexander Zverev in the 2020 US Open final remains the only final between two players born in the 1990s. Six years ago, in his first ATP challenger tournament and third professional outing overall, a 15-year-old Alcaraz was drawn against Sinner at the Juan Carlos Ferrero Academy in Villena, Spain, his training base. The pair had both received wildcards, with Alcaraz completely unranked and a 17-year-old Sinner holding a modest ranking of No 319. Alcaraz won in three sets. Since then, every meeting has only further heightened the anticipation that this would soon be the most important rivalry in the men's game. By the time they were battling at almost 3am in their 2022 US Open quarter-final, an instant classic won in five sets by Alcaraz en route to his first grand slam title, this moment felt inevitable. 'He's a player who makes me a better player,' said Sinner on Friday. 'He pushes me to the limit. We try to understand where we have to improve for the next time I play against him.' Although he needed more time to iron out his early mental deficiencies, Sinner has established a remarkable level of consistency since he found his path at the end of 2023. Sinner's record is 47-2 since last August, winning the last two grand slam titles at the US Open and Australian Open, and the vast majority of those matches have not even been close. His three-month doping ban between February and May has done little to halt his momentum and form. Six matches into the event, Sinner has undoubtedly been the player of the tournament, tearing through his opponents without dropping a set. Both players have many years to build their résumés, but as he seeks out his first grand slam title away from hard courts, Sinner will also be attempting to win his fourth major title, which would draw him level with Alcaraz. Those two defeats suffered by Sinner, however, came at the hands of Alcaraz, who won their gripping three-set final in the Beijing Open last year and then recently outplayed Sinner in Rome, Sinner's comeback tournament from his doping ban. In contrast to the composed consistency established by Sinner, Alcaraz can be wild and unpredictable. Just as his varied, complete game has taken him to greater heights than Sinner, the lows have similarly been far more desolate. Sign up to The Recap The best of our sports journalism from the past seven days and a heads-up on the weekend's action after newsletter promotion Sinner is one of the purest, most destructive shotmakers on the tour and he robs time from all challengers with his depth, pace and devastating weight of shot. During the early stages of their rivalry, Alcaraz attempted to match the Italian's firepower with his own heavy weaponry but he now understands that his edge in this match-up is the variety he has at his fingertips. Sinner thrives on rhythm and pace, but Alcaraz has spent the past few meetings employing the full toolbox of shots to disrupt the Italian at all costs. There are ample reasons for Alcaraz to be hopeful about his prospects on Sunday, even as the Italian continues to destroy the rest of the field. Alcaraz has now won their last four meetings, establishing a 7-4 lead in their overall head-to-head, and in a year that has already seen him win in Monte Carlo and Rome, red clay remains the Spaniard's dominant surface. However, in these battles between two generational talents, the only certainty is that every time they enter the court against their greatest rival, the most difficult match of their career awaits.

Briton Hannah Klugman's historic French Open run ends with defeat in juniors final
Briton Hannah Klugman's historic French Open run ends with defeat in juniors final

The Independent

time39 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Briton Hannah Klugman's historic French Open run ends with defeat in juniors final

Hannah Klugman 's brilliant run at the French Open came to an end with defeat in the girls' singles final, as Austria's Lilli Tagger secured the junior title. 16-year-old Klugman, a former girls' doubles runner-up in Wimbledon in 2023 and the Australian Open in January, was playing in her maiden grand slam singles final. She was aiming to become the first British player since Michelle Tyler in 1976 to seal a junior title at Roland-Garros. But despite an excellent run on an unfamiliar surface, including fighting back from a set down in both her quarter- and semi-final, Klugman had no answer to Tagger and lost 6-2, 6-0 earlier on Saturday. An emotional Klugman, who shot to prominence as the winner of the prestigious Orange Bowl junior tournament aged 14, said, 'It's been a long week but I'm really proud of myself.' Klugman had chances to break in the opening and seventh games of the first set, but could not capitalise on her opportunities and dropped serve in the fourth game. Her 17-year-old opponent imposed herself from the baseline and an early break in the second set proved crucial as Klugman's level dropped. She double faulted on break point down to concede another break for 4-0, with the Austrian - the junior world No. 47 compared to Klugman's ranking of 13th - running away with the set to seal the title. Wimbledon-born Klugman is one of Britain's most promising juniors, and excelled in Paris despite having had had little experience on clay until a two-month stint practicing on the surface earlier this year, including a spell at the Rafael Nadal Academy. She told BBC Sport that meeting the 14-time French Open champion had spurred her on. 'He's my idol - I love Rafa. He said some amazing things to me,' she said. 'I struggled a bit last year and he said 'as soon as you've got the level, everything will come. So just trust it and work hard every day'.'

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