logo
Vintage Novak makes hay on clay to set up Sinner semi

Vintage Novak makes hay on clay to set up Sinner semi

Three-time champion Novak Djokovic kept up his quest for a record-breaking 25th grand slam singles title, battling past third seed Alexander Zverev 4-6 6-3 6-2 6-4 to set up a French Open semi-final against top seed Jannik Sinner.
The 38-year-old Serbian notched his 101st victory at Roland Garros, site of his Olympic gold medal victory last year at the Paris Games, after three hours and 17 minutes.
Former world No.1 Djokovic is just two matches away from becoming the first player, male or female, to win 25 grand slam singles trophies.
Earlier on Wednesday Sinner booked his spot in the last four with a straight-sets win over Kazakh Alexander Bublik.
"Obviously there was a lot of tension, pressure, but it is normal when you play against Zverev, one of the best in the world," Djokovic said in a post-match interview.
"My game is based on a lot of running. I am 38 years old, it is not easy to keep running like that but, OK, it works.''
Zverev, last year's finalist who is still searching for a maiden grand slam title, started strongly and broke Djokovic in the first game.
Attempting to join the Serb, Rafael Nadal and Roger Federer as the only men in the Open Era to reach French Open semi-finals in five consecutive years, the German held on to that advantage to earn the first set.
Knowing he could not match his 28-year-old opponent for fitness, Djokovic tried to keep the rallies as short as possible, playing more and more drop shots - 35 in total - to force the tall Zverev to the net.
Djokovic broke his opponent at 2-1 in the second set and was quickly 4-1 up before Zverev had any time to react. He secured the second set with yet another drop shot.
The veteran then broke Zverev twice more to bag the third set with his opponent running out of steam, lacking accuracy and having no clear plan B.
Another break at the start of the fourth set put Djokovic 2-0 up and firmly on the winning track before he wrapped it up on his fifth match point to reach a record-extending 51st grand slam semi-final.
Earlier, Sinner marched on in his relentless pursuit of a first French Open title with a typically efficient win over Kazakh showman Bublik.
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 6-1 7-5 6-0 victory.
The near-flawless victory, in just one hour and 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 and worked the No.1 seed harder to stay level after 10 games.
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 sealed the win to book a semi-final against Djokovic.
Three-time champion Novak Djokovic kept up his quest for a record-breaking 25th grand slam singles title, battling past third seed Alexander Zverev 4-6 6-3 6-2 6-4 to set up a French Open semi-final against top seed Jannik Sinner.
The 38-year-old Serbian notched his 101st victory at Roland Garros, site of his Olympic gold medal victory last year at the Paris Games, after three hours and 17 minutes.
Former world No.1 Djokovic is just two matches away from becoming the first player, male or female, to win 25 grand slam singles trophies.
Earlier on Wednesday Sinner booked his spot in the last four with a straight-sets win over Kazakh Alexander Bublik.
"Obviously there was a lot of tension, pressure, but it is normal when you play against Zverev, one of the best in the world," Djokovic said in a post-match interview.
"My game is based on a lot of running. I am 38 years old, it is not easy to keep running like that but, OK, it works.''
Zverev, last year's finalist who is still searching for a maiden grand slam title, started strongly and broke Djokovic in the first game.
Attempting to join the Serb, Rafael Nadal and Roger Federer as the only men in the Open Era to reach French Open semi-finals in five consecutive years, the German held on to that advantage to earn the first set.
Knowing he could not match his 28-year-old opponent for fitness, Djokovic tried to keep the rallies as short as possible, playing more and more drop shots - 35 in total - to force the tall Zverev to the net.
Djokovic broke his opponent at 2-1 in the second set and was quickly 4-1 up before Zverev had any time to react. He secured the second set with yet another drop shot.
The veteran then broke Zverev twice more to bag the third set with his opponent running out of steam, lacking accuracy and having no clear plan B.
Another break at the start of the fourth set put Djokovic 2-0 up and firmly on the winning track before he wrapped it up on his fifth match point to reach a record-extending 51st grand slam semi-final.
Earlier, Sinner marched on in his relentless pursuit of a first French Open title with a typically efficient win over Kazakh showman Bublik.
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 6-1 7-5 6-0 victory.
The near-flawless victory, in just one hour and 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 and worked the No.1 seed harder to stay level after 10 games.
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 sealed the win to book a semi-final against Djokovic.
Three-time champion Novak Djokovic kept up his quest for a record-breaking 25th grand slam singles title, battling past third seed Alexander Zverev 4-6 6-3 6-2 6-4 to set up a French Open semi-final against top seed Jannik Sinner.
The 38-year-old Serbian notched his 101st victory at Roland Garros, site of his Olympic gold medal victory last year at the Paris Games, after three hours and 17 minutes.
Former world No.1 Djokovic is just two matches away from becoming the first player, male or female, to win 25 grand slam singles trophies.
Earlier on Wednesday Sinner booked his spot in the last four with a straight-sets win over Kazakh Alexander Bublik.
"Obviously there was a lot of tension, pressure, but it is normal when you play against Zverev, one of the best in the world," Djokovic said in a post-match interview.
"My game is based on a lot of running. I am 38 years old, it is not easy to keep running like that but, OK, it works.''
Zverev, last year's finalist who is still searching for a maiden grand slam title, started strongly and broke Djokovic in the first game.
Attempting to join the Serb, Rafael Nadal and Roger Federer as the only men in the Open Era to reach French Open semi-finals in five consecutive years, the German held on to that advantage to earn the first set.
Knowing he could not match his 28-year-old opponent for fitness, Djokovic tried to keep the rallies as short as possible, playing more and more drop shots - 35 in total - to force the tall Zverev to the net.
Djokovic broke his opponent at 2-1 in the second set and was quickly 4-1 up before Zverev had any time to react. He secured the second set with yet another drop shot.
The veteran then broke Zverev twice more to bag the third set with his opponent running out of steam, lacking accuracy and having no clear plan B.
Another break at the start of the fourth set put Djokovic 2-0 up and firmly on the winning track before he wrapped it up on his fifth match point to reach a record-extending 51st grand slam semi-final.
Earlier, Sinner marched on in his relentless pursuit of a first French Open title with a typically efficient win over Kazakh showman Bublik.
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 6-1 7-5 6-0 victory.
The near-flawless victory, in just one hour and 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 and worked the No.1 seed harder to stay level after 10 games.
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 sealed the win to book a semi-final against Djokovic.
Three-time champion Novak Djokovic kept up his quest for a record-breaking 25th grand slam singles title, battling past third seed Alexander Zverev 4-6 6-3 6-2 6-4 to set up a French Open semi-final against top seed Jannik Sinner.
The 38-year-old Serbian notched his 101st victory at Roland Garros, site of his Olympic gold medal victory last year at the Paris Games, after three hours and 17 minutes.
Former world No.1 Djokovic is just two matches away from becoming the first player, male or female, to win 25 grand slam singles trophies.
Earlier on Wednesday Sinner booked his spot in the last four with a straight-sets win over Kazakh Alexander Bublik.
"Obviously there was a lot of tension, pressure, but it is normal when you play against Zverev, one of the best in the world," Djokovic said in a post-match interview.
"My game is based on a lot of running. I am 38 years old, it is not easy to keep running like that but, OK, it works.''
Zverev, last year's finalist who is still searching for a maiden grand slam title, started strongly and broke Djokovic in the first game.
Attempting to join the Serb, Rafael Nadal and Roger Federer as the only men in the Open Era to reach French Open semi-finals in five consecutive years, the German held on to that advantage to earn the first set.
Knowing he could not match his 28-year-old opponent for fitness, Djokovic tried to keep the rallies as short as possible, playing more and more drop shots - 35 in total - to force the tall Zverev to the net.
Djokovic broke his opponent at 2-1 in the second set and was quickly 4-1 up before Zverev had any time to react. He secured the second set with yet another drop shot.
The veteran then broke Zverev twice more to bag the third set with his opponent running out of steam, lacking accuracy and having no clear plan B.
Another break at the start of the fourth set put Djokovic 2-0 up and firmly on the winning track before he wrapped it up on his fifth match point to reach a record-extending 51st grand slam semi-final.
Earlier, Sinner marched on in his relentless pursuit of a first French Open title with a typically efficient win over Kazakh showman Bublik.
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 6-1 7-5 6-0 victory.
The near-flawless victory, in just one hour and 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 and worked the No.1 seed harder to stay level after 10 games.
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 sealed the win to book a semi-final against Djokovic.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Sinner faces Djokovic as reigning champion Alcaraz eyes French Open final
Sinner faces Djokovic as reigning champion Alcaraz eyes French Open final

News.com.au

timean hour ago

  • News.com.au

Sinner faces Djokovic as reigning champion Alcaraz eyes French Open final

World number one Jannik Sinner locks horns with 24-time Grand Slam champion Novak Djokovic in the French Open semi-finals Friday, as Carlos Alcaraz tries to keep his title defence on track against Lorenzo Musetti. Sinner has stormed into the last four without dropping a set while Djokovic impressed in a four-set win over last year's runner-up Alexander Zverev in the quarter-finals. Alcaraz delivered his most convincing display of the tournament in a ruthless demolition of Tommy Paul in the last round, while the in-form Musetti is targeting his first major final. Top seed and three-time Grand Slam winner Sinner takes on the most successful man ever to play the sport in a rivalry that connects one generation to the next. Sinner, 23, and Djokovic, 38, have split their eight meetings, but the Italian has won four of the last five matches to signal the undeniable power shift in men's tennis. Sinner is riding a 19-match winning run at Grand Slams as he chases a third successive major title, looking to go a step further at Roland Garros than last year's semi-final loss to Alcaraz in five sets. "(Djokovic) has shown now in the last period that he is back to the level," said Sinner. "It's going to be... very, very difficult. He's such an experienced player, 24 Grand Slams. I think that says everything." A week before Roland Garros, Djokovic had not won a single match on clay this year. But after capturing his 100th ATP title in Geneva and arriving at the French Open battle-tested, the 38-year-old Serbian has steadily hit his stride. The three-time Roland Garros champion is two wins away from a record-breaking 25th major to move him out in front of Margaret Court, but he is aware of the magnitude of the task ahead. "Jannik is in tremendous form, and he has been the best player for the last couple of years," said Djokovic. "There is no bigger occasion for me... I just hope that I will be able to physically keep up." Djokovic could become the first man to beat the world's top three players en route to a Grand Slam title after defeating third-ranked Zverev in the last eight, with world number two Alcaraz a possible final opponent. "I think at the moment he's a bit underrated, to be honest," Zverev said after his loss to the Serb. "I think like a lot of people count him out already, but this year he's had wins over Carlos at the Australian Open, he has had a win over me at the French Open. Forget the age. I think for any player, those are pretty good results." - Alcaraz continues title defence - Alcaraz resumes his burgeoning rivalry with Musetti, hoping to back up victories over the Italian in the Monte Carlo Masters final and Italian Open semi-finals. But Musetti, who also reached the last four in Madrid, is one of the form players on the ATP Tour and has carried that confidence into Roland Garros. "I mean he's playing great," said Alcaraz of his semi-final opponent. "It's going to be a beautiful battle, a beautiful match, I think we're both playing great tennis... it's going to be great for the people to watch as well." The Spaniard is targeting a fifth Grand Slam title this weekend and will be a heavy favourite on Friday despite Musetti's recent good run. Alcaraz has won the last five matches between the two since Musetti took their first meeting in the 2022 Hamburg Open final. He also dished out a straight-sets thrashing to Musetti in the 2023 French Open last 16, losing only seven games. World number seven Musetti will be playing in just his second Grand Slam semi-final, after a last-four defeat by Djokovic at Wimbledon last year. Should he go through and meet Sinner for the title, it would be the first all-Italian men's final at a Grand Slam. mw-jc/gj

Ian Thorpe robbed of $150k in watches, jewellery from home
Ian Thorpe robbed of $150k in watches, jewellery from home

The Advertiser

time11 hours ago

  • The Advertiser

Ian Thorpe robbed of $150k in watches, jewellery from home

Five-time Olympic gold medallist Ian Thorpe has allegedly been robbed of $150,000 in personal items. NSW Police confirmed a 42-year-old man had attended Paddington Police Station on June 5 to "report an alleged theft incident". "Officers attached to Eastern Suburbs Police Area Command have commenced an investigation into the incident," police said. "There is no further information available at this time." Thorpe's manager, James Erskine, confirmed that none of the champion swimmer's Olympic medals had been stolen in the robbery at Thorpe's home in Sydney's Edgecliff. 'He called up his insurers, and they said 'Go and make a police report'", Mr Erskine told 2GB on June 6. "I have no idea what the value is, to be honest." Thorpe retired from swimming in 2006 at the age of 24. He is currently working as a commentator for Channel 9. Thorpe has won five Olympic gold medals, the second most won by any Australian after fellow swimmer Emma McKeon. Thorpe was the most successful athlete at the 2000 Sydney Olympic gold medallist Ian Thorpe has allegedly been robbed of $150,000 in personal items. NSW Police confirmed a 42-year-old man had attended Paddington Police Station on June 5 to "report an alleged theft incident". "Officers attached to Eastern Suburbs Police Area Command have commenced an investigation into the incident," police said. "There is no further information available at this time." Thorpe's manager, James Erskine, confirmed that none of the champion swimmer's Olympic medals had been stolen in the robbery at Thorpe's home in Sydney's Edgecliff. 'He called up his insurers, and they said 'Go and make a police report'", Mr Erskine told 2GB on June 6. "I have no idea what the value is, to be honest." Thorpe retired from swimming in 2006 at the age of 24. He is currently working as a commentator for Channel 9. Thorpe has won five Olympic gold medals, the second most won by any Australian after fellow swimmer Emma McKeon. Thorpe was the most successful athlete at the 2000 Sydney Olympic gold medallist Ian Thorpe has allegedly been robbed of $150,000 in personal items. NSW Police confirmed a 42-year-old man had attended Paddington Police Station on June 5 to "report an alleged theft incident". "Officers attached to Eastern Suburbs Police Area Command have commenced an investigation into the incident," police said. "There is no further information available at this time." Thorpe's manager, James Erskine, confirmed that none of the champion swimmer's Olympic medals had been stolen in the robbery at Thorpe's home in Sydney's Edgecliff. 'He called up his insurers, and they said 'Go and make a police report'", Mr Erskine told 2GB on June 6. "I have no idea what the value is, to be honest." Thorpe retired from swimming in 2006 at the age of 24. He is currently working as a commentator for Channel 9. Thorpe has won five Olympic gold medals, the second most won by any Australian after fellow swimmer Emma McKeon. Thorpe was the most successful athlete at the 2000 Sydney Olympic gold medallist Ian Thorpe has allegedly been robbed of $150,000 in personal items. NSW Police confirmed a 42-year-old man had attended Paddington Police Station on June 5 to "report an alleged theft incident". "Officers attached to Eastern Suburbs Police Area Command have commenced an investigation into the incident," police said. "There is no further information available at this time." Thorpe's manager, James Erskine, confirmed that none of the champion swimmer's Olympic medals had been stolen in the robbery at Thorpe's home in Sydney's Edgecliff. 'He called up his insurers, and they said 'Go and make a police report'", Mr Erskine told 2GB on June 6. "I have no idea what the value is, to be honest." Thorpe retired from swimming in 2006 at the age of 24. He is currently working as a commentator for Channel 9. Thorpe has won five Olympic gold medals, the second most won by any Australian after fellow swimmer Emma McKeon. Thorpe was the most successful athlete at the 2000 Sydney Olympics.

Australian swimming legend Ian Thorpe allegedly scammed out of $150,000
Australian swimming legend Ian Thorpe allegedly scammed out of $150,000

West Australian

time13 hours ago

  • West Australian

Australian swimming legend Ian Thorpe allegedly scammed out of $150,000

Australian Olympic legend Ian Thorpe has been allegedly scammed out of $150,000, according to a report. The swimming champion was apparently seen at Paddington Police Station reporting an insurance matter. New South Wales Police said in a statement that the incident happened at 4pm AEST on Thursday, June 5. 'A 42-year-old man attended Paddington Police Station to report an alleged theft incident,' police said. 'Officers attached to eastern suburbs have commenced an investigation into the incident. 'There is no further information available at this time.' Details of what exactly happened are still unclear. The incident was first reported on radio host Ben Fordham's 2GB program . 'He turned up yesterday afternoon (to the police station) and he spoke to officers for an extended period,' Fordham said. 'It turns out that Thorpey has reported to police that he's a victim of crime, and it's not a small financial setback either. 'We believe that he's in the red to the tune of $150,000. There are no details about what's allegedly happened to Ian Thorpe. We don't know if he's been robbed online or in person.' Ian Thorpe's manager James Erskine has confirmed that Thorpe went to the police in Paddington to talk about an insurance job. 'So that indicates that he may have been robbed,' Fordham said. Thorpe has been living in Sydney's eastern suburbs. His $3.5 million townhouse in Woollahra was up for sale late last year, but it is unclear where he's based at the moment. Thorpe — who retired from swimming in 2006 before a brief comeback in 2011 — is a five-time Olympic gold medallist and an 11-time world champion. Also known as the Thorpedo, he was a global powerhouse in the 400m freestyle event and the 200m freestyle. He has since become a respected commentator.

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