
Sinner in the most devilish form at Roland Garros
Poor old Jiri Lehecka will not forget the day he ran into the world no.1 Jannik Sinner at his most demonically ruthless -- and still earned a standing ovation.
Lehecka is no mug, a 23-year-old Czech who reached the Australian Open a couple of years ago, who's been on the verge of the top 20 and is still a force to be respected on tour at No.34.
None of which proved any defence against a supreme returning champion on a mission on Saturday as Sinner gave him such a hiding that the only decent thing the crowd on Court Suzanne Lenglen could do was to rise to their feet and roar when he finally won a game at the 12th time of asking.
Lehecka acknowledged the sympathy with a raised arm and fist pump, happy to take the rise out of himself. It didn't get any easier, though, as he eventually left the arena schooled and shell-shocked, marmalised 6-0 6-1 6-2 in just over an hour and a half.
That's now 17 grand slam wins in a row for Sinner, and it really looks as if the only thing his doping ban provided was a welcome bit of r and r for the 23-year-old. This, too, was his most dominant win ever at a grand slam.
"We try to improve," said Sinner, who'll meet a doubtless fearful Andrey Rublev in the last-16 on Monday. "Today, I don't think there are many things I can improve."
No-one was arguing. He hit 31 winners, made just nine mistakes, earned seven breaks of serve and saved the only break point he faced.
At least Rublev will be rested for his big date as his third-round match against Frenchman Arthur Fils never materialised with the French hope sidelined because of a stress fracture in his lower back.
The adventures of wonder boy Joao Fonseca were ended ruthlessly later on Lenglen by Britain's increasingly impressive Jack Draper, the US Open semi-finalist who tamed the 18-year-old Brazilian 6-2 6-4 6-2.
Alexander Bublik, the Kazakh maverick who sent Alex de Minaur home in a second-round sensation, continued his fun with a 7-5 6-1 6-2 dismissal of Portuguese qualifier Henrique Rocha.
Alexander Zverev, last year's finalist, negotiated a potentially difficult hurdle in the shape of Italian Flavio Cobolli, prevailing 6-2 7-6 (7-4) 6-1.

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Sinner puts stop to Bublik's heroics
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Sinner snuffed out his challenge to win the first set with ease but ran into trouble in the next set when Bublik pulled out several trademark drop shots from his bag of tricks and worked the No.1 seed harder to stay level after 10 games. "We've played each other a couple of times already, so we already knew what to expect a little bit. But, in other aspects, you never know how he is going to play," Sinner said. An untimely dip allowed Sinner to pounce and the three-time grand slam champion broke before holding comfortably to stop any chance of a comeback from the world No.62 and move two sets ahead. The one-way traffic resumed in the third set. Bublik hit a failed underarm serve while trying to avoid going a double break down, before Sinner tightened his grip to seal the win and book a semi-final against either Alexander Zverev or Novak Djokovic. 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Sinner snuffed out his challenge to win the first set with ease but ran into trouble in the next set when Bublik pulled out several trademark drop shots from his bag of tricks and worked the No.1 seed harder to stay level after 10 games. "We've played each other a couple of times already, so we already knew what to expect a little bit. But, in other aspects, you never know how he is going to play," Sinner said. An untimely dip allowed Sinner to pounce and the three-time grand slam champion broke before holding comfortably to stop any chance of a comeback from the world No.62 and move two sets ahead. The one-way traffic resumed in the third set. Bublik hit a failed underarm serve while trying to avoid going a double break down, before Sinner tightened his grip to seal the win and book a semi-final against either Alexander Zverev or Novak Djokovic. World number one Jannik Sinner marched on in his relentless pursuit of a first French Open title with a typically efficient win over Kazakh showman Alexander Bublik to reach the semi-finals. King of he drop shot Bublik had put out two top-10 seeds en route to the last eight – Australia's Alex de Minaur and Britain's Jack Draper – but Sinner ensured no repeat with a comprehensive 6-1 7-5 6-0 victory on Wednesday. The near-flawless victory, in just 1 hour, 49 minutes, ensured Sinner became the first Italian man to play in six grand slam semi-finals and extended his winning run at the majors to 19 matches, after his triumphs at last year's US Open and the Australian Open in January. Sinner has not dropped a set, and has lost 36 games all told in his five matches to date. The Court Philippe Chatrier roof was open after a cold, rainy morning and Sinner raced away to a 5-0 lead before Bublik got on the board and then threatened to break the top seed. Sinner snuffed out his challenge to win the first set with ease but ran into trouble in the next set when Bublik pulled out several trademark drop shots from his bag of tricks and worked the No.1 seed harder to stay level after 10 games. "We've played each other a couple of times already, so we already knew what to expect a little bit. But, in other aspects, you never know how he is going to play," Sinner said. An untimely dip allowed Sinner to pounce and the three-time grand slam champion broke before holding comfortably to stop any chance of a comeback from the world No.62 and move two sets ahead. The one-way traffic resumed in the third set. Bublik hit a failed underarm serve while trying to avoid going a double break down, before Sinner tightened his grip to seal the win and book a semi-final against either Alexander Zverev or Novak Djokovic. 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Sinner snuffed out his challenge to win the first set with ease but ran into trouble in the next set when Bublik pulled out several trademark drop shots from his bag of tricks and worked the No.1 seed harder to stay level after 10 games. "We've played each other a couple of times already, so we already knew what to expect a little bit. But, in other aspects, you never know how he is going to play," Sinner said. An untimely dip allowed Sinner to pounce and the three-time grand slam champion broke before holding comfortably to stop any chance of a comeback from the world No.62 and move two sets ahead. The one-way traffic resumed in the third set. Bublik hit a failed underarm serve while trying to avoid going a double break down, before Sinner tightened his grip to seal the win and book a semi-final against either Alexander Zverev or Novak Djokovic.


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Sinner puts stop to Bublik's heroics
World number one Jannik Sinner marched on in his relentless pursuit of a first French Open title with a typically efficient win over Kazakh showman Alexander Bublik to reach the semi-finals. King of he drop shot Bublik had put out two top-10 seeds en route to the last eight – Australia's Alex de Minaur and Britain's Jack Draper – but Sinner ensured no repeat with a comprehensive 6-1 7-5 6-0 victory on Wednesday. The near-flawless victory, in just 1 hour, 49 minutes, ensured Sinner became the first Italian man to play in six grand slam semi-finals and extended his winning run at the majors to 19 matches, after his triumphs at last year's US Open and the Australian Open in January. Sinner has not dropped a set, and has lost 36 games all told in his five matches to date. The Court Philippe Chatrier roof was open after a cold, rainy morning and Sinner raced away to a 5-0 lead before Bublik got on the board and then threatened to break the top seed. Sinner snuffed out his challenge to win the first set with ease but ran into trouble in the next set when Bublik pulled out several trademark drop shots from his bag of tricks and worked the No.1 seed harder to stay level after 10 games. "We've played each other a couple of times already, so we already knew what to expect a little bit. But, in other aspects, you never know how he is going to play," Sinner said. An untimely dip allowed Sinner to pounce and the three-time grand slam champion broke before holding comfortably to stop any chance of a comeback from the world No.62 and move two sets ahead. The one-way traffic resumed in the third set. Bublik hit a failed underarm serve while trying to avoid going a double break down, before Sinner tightened his grip to seal the win and book a semi-final against either Alexander Zverev or Novak Djokovic.