
Tennis-Djokovic faces Misolic at French Open with Parisian eyes on Champions League final
Tennis - French Open - Roland Garros, Paris, France - May 29, 2025 Serbia's Novak Djokovic in action during his second round match against France's Corentin Moutet REUTERS/Lisi Niesner
PARIS (Reuters) - The French Open third round continues on Saturday with Novak Djokovic headlining the night session, while world number one Jannik Sinner and top seeds including Alexander Zverev, Jack Draper, Coco Gauff and Madison Keys are also in action.
TOP MEN'S MATCH: FILIP MISOLIC V NOVAK DJOKOVIC
Djokovic may have hoped to spend his Saturday night watching the soccer Champions League final between Paris St Germain and Inter Milan.
But tournament organisers had other plans with his third-round match against Austrian Misolic clashing with the final as they do their best to fill Court Philippe-Chatrier even though most Parisian eyes will be on Munich.
Djokovic, who turned 38 last week, was made to work hard by unseeded Frenchman Corentin Moutet in the previous round but the Serbian sixth seed, who also took a medical timeout, will hope to return to his fluent best when he takes on Misolic.
Having shut down talk of decline with his Geneva Open triumph — his 100th tour-level title — and winning both his matches at Roland Garros in straight sets, Djokovic will be the heavy favourite against Misolic in their first meeting.
TOP WOMEN'S MATCH: MADISON KEYS V SOFIA KENIN
Court Suzanne-Lenglen will play host to the battle of two Grand Slam champions in an all-American affair when Keys, the reigning Australian Open champion, takes on Kenin, the 2020 winner at Melbourne Park.
Seventh seed Keys has a 3-1 winning record over Kenin. However, Kenin has won their only match on clay in Rome in 2019.
Kenin had reached a career-high number four in the world rankings after her Melbourne triumph and finished runner-up at the French Open later that season, before injuries, illness and off-court issues saw her drop to 235 in 2023.
The 26-year-old has since climbed back up the world rankings to number 30 and knocked out Victoria Azarenka in the previous round in straight sets.
TEENAGE SENSATION FONSECA PLOTS DRAPER UPSET
Joao Fonseca, arguably the most exciting young prospect in the men's game, faces the toughest test of his French Open campaign when the 18-year-old Brazilian faces Draper on Court Simonne-Mathieu.
Until arriving at Roland Garros, Fonseca had never reached the third round at a Grand Slam.
But on Thursday, he took out local hope Pierre-Hugues Herbert to reach the third round, having also upset Polish 30th seed Hubert Hurkacz in his opener.
Fonseca, who has yet to drop a set at Roland Garros, will now hope his fine run of form and the backing of the vociferous crowd can lift him to an upset win over Indian Wells champion Draper.
FRENCH OPEN ORDER OF PLAY ON SATURDAY (prefix number denotes seeding):
COURT PHILIPPE-CHATRIER (play begins at 1000 GMT)
Marketa Vondrousova (Czech Republic) v 3-Jessica Pegula (U.S.)
3-Alexander Zverev (Germany) v Flavio Cobolli (Italy)
Marie Bouzkova (Czech Republic) v 2-Coco Gauff (U.S.)
6-Novak Djokovic (Serbia) v Filip Misolic (Austria)
COURT SUZANNE-LENGLEN (play begins at 0900 GMT)
6-Mirra Andreeva (Russia) v 32-Yulia Putintseva (Kazakhstan)
1-Jannik Sinner (Italy) v Jiri Lehecka (Czech Republic)
17-Andrey Rublev (Russia) v 14-Arthur Fils (France)
7-Madison Keys (U.S.) v 31-Sofia Kenin (U.S.)
COURT SIMONNE-MATHIEU (play begins at 0900 GMT)
17-Daria Kasatkina (Australia) v 10-Paula Badosa (Spain)
Elsa Jacquemot (France) v Lois Boisson (France)
Joao Fonseca (Brazil) v 5-Jack Draper (Britain)
Cameron Norrie (Britain) v Jacob Fearnley (Britain)
(Reporting by Pearl Josephine Nazare in Bengaluru; Editing by Toby Davis)
Hashtags

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


The Star
27 minutes ago
- The Star
Athletics-Jefferson-Wood triumphs in 200m at Grand Slam Philadelphia meet
May 31, 2025; Philadelphia, PA, USA; Melissa Jefferson-Wooden (USA) wins the women's 200m in 21.99 during the Grand Slam Track Philadelphia at Franklin Field. Mandatory Credit: Kirby Lee-Imagn Images (Reuters) -Olympic 100m bronze medallist Melissa Jefferson-Wood clocked 21.99 seconds in the women's 200m at the Grand Slam Track meet in Philadelphia on Saturday, edging Olympic 200m gold medallist Gabby Thomas at Franklin Field. Jefferson-Wood, who usually specialises in shorter sprints, said her 200m training paid off after a third-place finish in Miami earlier this month. "I've been training for it, I told myself what happened in Miami wasn't going to happen again," she said. Jamaica's Ackera Nugent won the women's 100m hurdles in 12.44 seconds, while Kenya's Agnes Jebet Ngetich claimed the 1500m title in 3:58.04. Dominican Marileidy Paulino recorded 49.12 seconds to win the women's 400m long hurdles, while Briton Matthew Hudson-Smith took the men's 400m event in 44.51. Canada's Marco Arop claimed victory in the men's 800m in 1:43.48 – his third win in the event at Grand Slam races. Arop, who won world championship gold in 2023 and Olympic silver in 2024, pulled away from American Josh Hoey, who finished second in 1:44.41, and is set to run the 1,500m on Sunday. "It felt great, the crowd, look at this! It's easy to run fast in a stadium like this so I had to put on a show for them," Arop told TNT Sports. Also in the men's events, Kenny Bednarek recorded 19.95 seconds for the 200m while Brazilian Alison dos Santos remained undefeated after winning the men's 400m hurdles in 48.11 seconds. Competitors take part in two races over 12 events, with overall points totals deciding group champions on Sunday. (Reporting by Angelica Medina in Mexico City)


Malay Mail
32 minutes ago
- Malay Mail
Paris piledriver: PSG smash five past sorry Inter to seal first Euro crown in record romp
MUNICH, June 1 — Paris Saint-Germain won the Champions League for the first time as Luis Enrique's brilliant young side outclassed Inter Milan yesterday in the most one-sided final ever with teenager Desire Doue scoring twice in an astonishing 5-0 victory. Doue supplied the pass for Achraf Hakimi to give PSG an early lead and the 19-year-old went from provider to finisher as his deflected shot doubled the advantage in the 20th minute. Doue scored again just after the hour mark, ending any doubt about the outcome before Khvicha Kvaratskhelia ran away to get the fourth and substitute Senny Mayulu, another teenager, made it five. Inter were simply no match for the French club, who recorded the biggest victory by any team in the final in the 70-year history of the European Cup and Champions League. 'This means everything. It's our dream. It's incredible. The result is not by magic. I'm happy we did it like this,' said PSG's Portuguese midfielder Vitinha. The triumph for the Parisians follows over a decade of huge investment from their Qatari owners, and comes five years after they lost to Bayern Munich in their only previous final appearance. Already domestic league and cup double winners, they are just the second French winners of European football's biggest prize — Marseille were the first in 1993, when they beat AC Milan in a final also played in Munich. It is also a second Champions League for PSG coach Luis Enrique, who won with Lionel Messi's Barcelona in 2015. This youthful PSG side is arguably the best the competition has seen since, one that has been intelligently pieced together over the last two years and fully unleashed this season following the departure of Kylian Mbappe. 'It was the objective since the start of last season to make history. I have felt a really strong connection with the players and the supporters,' Luis Enrique told broadcaster Canal Plus. For a bewildered Inter, there was to be no first Champions League title since 2010 as they failed to add to their three previous triumphs in the competition. Simone Inzaghi's side have got to the final twice in three seasons and lost both, and this defeat comes a week after they missed out on the Serie A title to Napoli. They end the campaign trophyless, and their ageing side will need to be rebuilt. 'PSG absolutely deserved to win this match. We are very disappointed,' admitted Inzaghi. 'As a coach I am proud of our campaign, but we're not satisfied with tonight's game. PSG outplayed us. 'I thanked the players for what they did this season. We won no silverware, but I'm proud.' Doue at the double PSG gave their opponents no chance from the off on a sweaty night at the Allianz Arena, going ahead in the 12th minute. It was a glorious goal, Vitinha threading a pass to Doue who squared for Hakimi to finish before refusing to celebrate against his former club. It was also the earliest goal in a Champions League final since 2019, and recent history was firmly against Inter. The last final in which both teams scored was in 2018, while the last team to concede first but still win were Real Madrid in 2014. But soon Inter were further behind with a goal from a counterattack. Willian Pacho prevented Inter from winning a corner, his clearance falling to Kvaratskhelia, who released Ousmane Dembele. His pass found Doue and the youngster, preferred in the starting line-up to Bradley Barcola, fired home via a deflection off Federico Dimarco. Inter only really came close to scoring in the first half when Marcus Thuram headed wide at a corner, but things got worse after the break. Their back line was in disarray as PSG made it 3-0 on 63 minutes, Dembele's flick releasing Vitinha before he set up Doue to beat goalkeeper Yann Sommer. Doue came off shortly after to rapturous applause, but his teammates were far from done. Dembele sent Kvaratskhelia away to to make it 4-0 in the 73rd minute, and the 19-year-old Mayulu played a one-two with Barcola before lashing in the fifth on 86 minutes. That rounded off an incredible night, with PSG becoming the first team to score five goals in the final since Benfica in 1962. — AFP


New Straits Times
38 minutes ago
- New Straits Times
Djokovic and Sinner flex muscles to reach French Open last 16 as Keys survives
PARIS: Novak Djokovic and Jannik Sinner flexed their muscles on Saturday, powering into the fourth round of the French Open in straight sets, as Madison Keys saved three match points to advance alongside three other American women. Djokovic eased past Austrian qualifier Filip Misolic 6-3, 6-4, 6-2 on Court Philippe Chatrier to keep his quest for a record-breaking 25th Grand Slam title on track. The three-time French Open winner took just over two hours to beat 153rd-ranked Misolic and will next play Britain's 81st-ranked Cameron Norrie for a place in the quarter-finals. Djokovic played in the night session on centre court with the match overlapping with the UEFA Champions League final between Paris Saint-Germain and Inter Milan. "I don't know if it was good for me to get this scheduled slot, because it was interesting, the crowd was really following the (football) game," he said. "And I could hear once they (PSG) scored, and it was way too many times that they were celebrating. I was like, 'Wow, there's a lot of goals from Paris' and 'What's going on?'. So now I heard it's 5-0, so it's quite a result, to be honest." The 38-year-old faced only one break point, which he saved, while hitting just 14 unforced errors to 33 winners. Earlier, world number one Sinner eased through 6-0, 6-1, 6-2 against outclassed world number 34 Jiri Lehecka. "I think in early stages of Grand Slams it's good that you don't spend so much time, if you have the chance, on court," said the top-seed Italian. "I don't think there's much I could improve." Three-time Grand Slam winner Sinner next meets Russia's Andrey Rublev, who advanced after France's Arthur Fils withdrew injured on Friday. Sinner has been finding his feet since his comeback from a three-month doping ban, reaching the Italian Open final where he lost to reigning Roland Garros champion Carlos Alcaraz. And the 23-year-old has not dropped a set in Paris -- extending his winning streak at Grand Slam events to 17 matches after titles at the 2024 US Open and Australian Open this January. British fifth seed Jack Draper proved too strong for Brazilian teenage sensation Joao Fonseca, winning 6-2, 6-4, 6-2 to progress through to the fourth round, where he will meet Kazakh Alexander Bublik. German third seed Zverev, who lost last year's final to Alcaraz, won 6-2, 7-6 (7/4), 6-1 against Hamburg champion Flavio Cobolli. "It was quite hot today, and I definitely felt it on the court," said Zverev. "But, yeah, happy to get through in three sets and not waste extra energy." In the women's draw, a relieved Keys edged fellow American Sofia Kenin 4-6, 6-3, 7-5. "I'm happy to be still in the tournament," said the 30-year-old seventh seed after she saved three match points when serving at 4-5 in the decider. "I really tried to dig deep." She advanced alongside fellow countrywomen Coco Gauff, Jessica Pegula and Hailey Baptiste. Keys will again face another compatriot in the next round after Baptiste downed Spain's Jessica Bouzas Maneiro 7-6 (7/4), 6-1. Keys and Kenin shared breaks early in the decider, before the reigning Australian Open champion broke the 31st seed at 5-5 and then held serve to see out the match. Former Australian Open champion and Roland Garros runner-up Kenin had led 3-0 in the third set, before the world number eight turned the match round to book her place in the last 16. World number two Gauff booked her ticket to the same stage with a straight-sets win over Czech Marie Bouzkova. The 21-year-old won through 6-1, 7-6 (7/3) against the world number 47 and next plays Ekaterina Alexandrova, the 20th seed, who beat fellow Russian Veronika Kudermetova 6-2, 6-2. Third seed Pegula joined her fellow Americans with a 3-6, 6-4, 6-2 win over Czech Marketa Vondrousova. Pegula, last year's US Open runner-up, next meets the unheralded Lois Boisson, ranked 361 and the last French player competing in Roland Garros. Boisson fought through the pain to see off 138th-ranked compatriot Elsa Jacquemot 6-3, 0-6, 7-5. "Obviously.. going to have some crazy support," said Pegula. "I think it will be fun. It will be cool to be a part of that." Earlier, 18-year-old Andreeva eased into the last 16 with a 6-3, 6-1 win over Kazakh Yulia Putintseva. Sixth seed Andreeva will next play Daria Kasatkina, ranked 17 and now playing for Australia after switching allegiance from her native Russia, who beat Spanish 10th seed Paula Badosa 6-1, 7-5. - AFP