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French Open semi-finals Live Updates: Carlos Musetti vs Lorenzo Alcaraz in action soon

After Coco Gauff and Aryna Sabalenka set up an ultimate showdown in the women’s singles, it’s time for the men’s singles on Friday.  Defending champion Carlos Alcaraz will lock horns with Italy’s Lorenzo Musetti in the first semi-final at Court Philippe Chatrier from 6 PM IST, local time 2:30 PM onwards.  Thereafter, the match between Novak Djokovic and Jannik Sinner will lock horns in the second semis. The match won’t start not before 10:30 PM IST, 7:00 PM local time. 

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French Open 2025: Mentalist Novak Djokovic ready for physical Jannik Sinner battle | Tennis News

French Open 2025: Mentalist Novak Djokovic ready for physical Jannik Sinner battle | Tennis News

Novak Djokovic reacts to fans’ cheers during a quarterfinal match against Alexander Zverev during the French Open at the Roland Garros stadium in Paris. (AP) Paris:Novak Djokovic has many descriptors, but nothing quite typifies the 24-time Grand Slam champion like the word ‘Mentalist’. The 38-year-old likes to lift an exchange, take it beyond the chalked lines, to that space between the ears. It’s where most competitors shrink and shrivel, while some others simply shift gear into beast mode. That is the precise space where the sixth-seeded Novak Djokovic will hope to play the world No. 1 Jannik Sinner, when the duo face-off in the French Open semifinals on Friday. It’s the pair’s ninth meeting with the head-to-head locked at 4-4.Go Beyond The Boundary with our YouTube channel. SUBSCRIBE NOW! “These kinds of matchups and challenges extract the best out of me. Playing best-of-five in the later stages of a Grand Slam, against the world No. 1, there can’t be greater motivation for me at this age,” Djokovic said. “I don’t think, how am I going to stop him? I think how am I going to execute what I want to do on the court?” Djokovic versus Sinner, the best player in history versus the No. 1 player in the world, is a dream semifinal. The matchup has everything — spice and ice, the romance of a clash between generations, energy and explosive edge versus 24-carat experience. In playing style, Sinner is the one who most resembles Djokovic from the younger cohort. His strengths are the same as the Serb, including the mental edge — only he’s 14 years younger. The Italian, 23, who returned to competition after serving a three-month ban for testing positive for Clostebol, a banned anabolic steroid, has faced mixed reactions in the locker room since the tests were made public last August. There has been support, however slim, indifference too, but a majority of the players felt he received preferential treatment. “The two cases of Iga Swiatek and Jannik Sinner have attracted a lot of attention and it’s not a good image for our sport,” Djokovic said earlier this year. “A majority of the players don’t feel that (the process is) fair. It appears that you can almost affect the outcome if you are a top player, if you have access to the top lawyers.” Sinner has won all of the pair’s last three meetings, played in a span of 10 months, between November 2023 and October 2024. The matches were played on hardcourts, which is the preferred surface of both players, but the three-time Roland Garros champion, who achieved a 100th singles… played a 250 Series event in Geneva, where he clinched his 100th Tour-level title, checking a box, before arriving in Paris. “The win against Alcaraz in the quarters of the Australian Open, the win against Zverev (quarters, on Wednesday night) proves that I can still play at the highest level. I just hope that I will be able to physically keep up with Sinner.” “He has shown now in the last period that he is back to the level,” Sinner said of Djokovic’s form. “It’s going to be tactical and very, very difficult.” In the first of Friday’s semifinals, defending champion Carlos Alcaraz plays the world No. 7 Lorenzo Musetti. The 22-year-old Spaniard leads the head-to-head 5-1, having finished on top in their last five meetings. Four of the duo’s six matches have been played on outdoor clay.

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French Open: Novak Djokovic outlasts Alexander Zverev, becomes oldest semifinalist in 57 years

French Open: Novak Djokovic outlasts Alexander Zverev, becomes oldest semifinalist in 57 years

24-time Grand Slam champion Novak Djokovic advanced to the semi-finals of the French Open 2025 with a commanding performance. On Wednesday, June 4, the 38-year-old defeated last year’s runner-up Alexander Zverev 4-6, 6-3, 6-2, 6-4 at Court Philippe-Chatrier. The Serb took three hours and 17 minutes to overcome the German and secure his place in a record-extending 51st Grand Slam semi-final. Djokovic also became the oldest player in 57 years to reach the French Open semi-finals, a feat last achieved by Richard Gonzales in 1968 at the age of 40 years and 18 days. After suffering four first-round exits earlier this year, Djokovic appeared out of rhythm, but has staged an impressive comeback in Paris, keeping his hopes alive for a 25th major title – his first since the 2023 US Open. Zverev started strong, breaking Djokovic early to go 2-0 up and eventually taking the opening set — the first set Djokovic dropped in the tournament. But from the second set onwards, Djokovic raised his level and did not allow Zverev another break of serve for the rest of the match. Also Read: French Open: Jannik Sinner emulates Rafael Nadal, storms into 2nd successive semi-final Speaking after the win, Djokovic said he had to mix things up and effectively deploy drop shots to keep Zverev guessing. “Especially during the last game, my tactic was just to play drop shots. So I played three or four in a row Maybe you can’t see it on TV, but there is a lot of wind from one side, so it gives the sensation that you must hit twice as hard. It was important to vary the game,” Djokovic said in the on-court interview. Zverev was let down by his inconsistency, committing 42 unforced errors despite hitting 38 winners – just four fewer than Djokovic’s tally. In the semi-finals, Djokovic faces a formidable challenge in World No. 1 Jannik Sinner, who cruised past Kazakhstan’s Alexander Bublik with a dominant 6-1, 7-5, 6-0 victory in the quarter-finals. Published By: sabyasachi chowdhury Published On: Jun 5, 2025

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A new era dawns at Roland Garros: No Rafael Nadal, slumping Iga Swiatek and no obvious favourites | Tennis News

A new era dawns at Roland Garros: No Rafael Nadal, slumping Iga Swiatek and no obvious favourites | Tennis News

Carlos Alcaraz (L) and Coco Gauff (R) are two of the contenders to lift the French Open title. (Getty Images/AP) For many years, the French Open had a predictability attached to it. For better or for worse, Rafael Nadalin the men’s field and Iga Swiatek in the women’s field were the safe bets. Both had stellar records to justify that billing. Nadal won 14 titles at Roland Garros (2005-2008; 2010-2014; 2017-2020; 2022) while Swiatek triumphed four years in a row (2020, 2022, 2023 and 2024).The Spaniard has dominated the red clay more than any one in the history of the sport and a 112-4 record is a clear indication of it. Still not convinced? The 14 times he reached the final, he won them all.Swiatek’s reign has been for a shorter time period and yet has been equally impressive with four titles in five years, including the last three. Among the active players, she has the best win percentage at Roland Garros (35-2; 94.6%) and triumphed in 2020 without dropping a set.Go Beyond The Boundary with our YouTube channel. SUBSCRIBE NOW!Now, as the French Open begins on May 25, things are not as crystal clear cut. 38-year-old Nadal has retired and will be on Philippe Chatrier Court only for a farewell ceremony on Sunday. He bowed out last year with his injury-hampered body not co-operating to the grind of the sport anymore. His final French Open appearance was a defeat to Alexander Zverev and Roland Garros adieu came a few weeks later at the Paris Olympics, losing to Novak Djokovic in singles, followed by doubles alongside Carlos Alcaraz.“There’s … 20 different people that you wouldn’t be surprised if they end up winning the tournament,” said USA’s Madison Keys, whose first major trophy came at the Australian Open in January. “Part of it is because we’ve kind of lost some of our legends, obviously. Like, there’s no longer Serena Williams in every draw, where you just assume she’s going to win.”Poland’s Swiatek took over that mantle from Serena, at least in Paris, for the past five years. That cannot be said this time around.Ever since clinching the title last year, she’s not reached a final let alone win a tournament. The fifth seed has had a less than flattering claycourt swing in preparation. She lost in the quarterfinals of Stuttgart, was hammered with a double breadstick by Coco Gauff in Madrid and an equally dismal show against Danielle Collins in Rome.Off the court, Swiatek has had an equally trying time. In a doping case, Swiatek was essentially cleared but did serve an oddly timed suspension.That brings us to the ‘D’ word which has gripped the sport more than on-court tennis. Swiatek now down to World No. 5 – trailing Aryna Sabalenka, Gauff, Jessica Pegula and Jasmine Paolini – and men’s World No. 1 Jannik Sinner have both been punished in different and equally peculiar ways. The Italian served a three-month ban earlier this year despite being cleared of wrongdoing by the sport’s governing body.After winning the Australian Open, Sinner reached a deal with the World Anti-Doping Agency, which appealed against the 23-year-old’s exoneration. It meant he won his third major title in Melbourne, went into a three-month hiatus, only to return for the Italian Open in Rome where he finished runner-up to Carlos Alcaraz.Alcaraz was asked about the complexity of the doping world, taking Max Purcell’s ban as an example, which he said “sounded like Chinese”. But what doesn’t sound like a foreign language is the desire to win a fifth major and second in a row in Paris. His muscle issues in both legs seemed to have become a thing of the past if the Rome final was any indication. Yet, despite his similarities and wish to pick up the mantle from Nadal, he is not a lock-in like his idol.That brings us to other contenders such as three-time major finalist Alexander Zverev, including making the last-four at Roland Garros in the last four straight editions. The inconsistent German’s best showing in the tune-up events was the title in Munich.Speaking of titles, Novak Djokovic, seeking his 25th major once again, clinched his 100th ATP trophy in Geneva, joining a list that is led by Jimmy Connors and Roger Federer. His first title since winning the gold medal at the Paris Olympics last year only faintly masks his three-match losing streak before it.“Kind of [a] new reality for me, I have to say. You know, trying to win a match or two, not really thinking about getting far in the tournament. It’s a completely different feeling from what I had in 20-plus years of professional tennis, so it’s kind of a challenge for me, mentally, to really face these kinds of sensations on the court, going out early now, regularly,” Djokovic said after an opening exit in Madrid.“But that’s, I guess, the circle of life and the career. Eventually, it was going to happen. … Grand Slams is where I really want to play the best tennis,” he added. “I’m not sure if I’ll be able to do that in Roland-Garros, but I’ll do my best.”On the women’s side, the field is open amid Swiatek’s unprecedented slump. The variety of tune-up champions tells the story – Jessica Pegula (Charleston), Jelena Ostapenko (Stuttgart), Aryna Sabalenka (Madrid) and Jasmine Paolini (Rome). Paolini became the eighth different player to reach a WTA 1000 final this season before pocketing her biggest career title.Sabalenka briefly dropped off from her best form after a surprise Australian Open final loss to Madison Keys before bouncing back with the Miami and Madrid Open titles.“I got really hungry and angry — angry in a good way and I think at the end, the Australian Open final pushed me to work even harder,” she told the WTA.“(It) kind of explained to me that you have to really work hard in finals and you have to earn your victories. It was a good push for me.”Coco Gauff’s first final appearances in…

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French Open 2024: Novak Djokovic opens up on acing back-to-back 5-setters after Round 4 win

French Open 2024: Novak Djokovic opens up on acing back-to-back 5-setters after Round 4 win

Novak Djokovic opened up after winning yet another 5-setter in the French Open 2024. On Monday, June 3, the veteran defeated Francisco Cerundolo 6-1, 5-7, 3-6, 7-5, 6-3 at Philippe-Chatrier. The 37-year-old had to go through lots of ups and downs in the match before having the last laugh after 4 hours and 29 minutes. Prior to that, Djokovic took over 4 hours to get the better of Italy’s Lorenzo Musetti. In both his matches against Musetti and Cerundolo, the defending champion seemed in discomfort before upping his game to come up trumps. Djokovic admitted that he could easily have lost both times, but also credited the crowd for cheering him up. “I had the same question from Alex Corretja after the last match. I have to say thank you to the fans, like in the previous match. Against Musetti, it was 2-2 in the fourth set and my energy level changed completely. You gave me a lot of energy. Today the same thing happened. You gave me a lot of support. Not much more I can say,” Djokovic said in the on-court interview. ‘Cerundolo deserves to be applauded’ Djokovic also lauded Cerundolo for putting in the hard yards and putting him under immense pressure following the opening set. “Perhaps I was 3 or 4 points from losing this match today. I have to congratulate Francisco because he played with excellent quality. He deserves to be applauded. The only explanation I have is thanks to you. So thank you again for all your support,” Djokovic added. Djokovic, in the meantime, went past Roger Federer to record the most wins (370) in Grand Slams. He also broke Federer’s record of most Grand Slam quarterfinal appearances (59). Djokovic will next be up against the winner of the match between Casper Ruud and Taylor Fritz. Published By: sabyasachi chowdhury Published On: Jun 4, 2024

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French Open 2024, Day 7, Order of Play: When will Sabalenka, Djokovic and Zverev play?

French Open 2024, Day 7, Order of Play: When will Sabalenka, Djokovic and Zverev play?

Day 7 of the Roland Garros will witness several big names in action on the clay. In women’s singles, Aryna Sabalenka will face Paula Badosa to continue her 3rd Grand Slam quest. Meanwhile, Novak Djokovic, Alexander Zverev and Daniil Medvedev will feature in the men’s draw. The day promises to be of high-quality action with a packed schedule as some of the biggest stars will bid to keep their challenge alive in Paris. In the women’s singles, World No. 2 Sabalenka will take on Badosa in the third round on Philippe-Chartier, and fourth seed Elena Rybakina will face Elise Mertens. French Open 2024: Full Coverage Sabalenka has looked impressive on the clay so far, defying all the challenges to power her way to the third round. Sabalenka, the second seed, secured her spot in the French Open third round with a dominant 6-2 , 6-2 victory over Japanese qualifier Uchijima. Rybakina faced a stiff challenge as she moved to the third round by defeating Aranxta Rus 6-3, 6-4. There were doubts over Djokovic ahead of the 2nd Grand Slam of the year but the Serbian has made serene progress so far on the Paris clay. He is yet to drop a set in victories over Pierre-Hugues Herbert and Roberto Caraballes Baena. However, he will not be overlooking Italy’s Lorenzo Musetti as the 30th seed is also yet to lose a set. Medvedev had breezed into the third round of the French Open as his Serbian opponent, Kecmanovic, retired from their match due to injury on Thursday. COURT PHILIPPE CHATRIER – FROM 2:30 pm IST Elise Mertens (25) v Elena Rybakina (4)Paula Badosa v Aryna Sabalenka (2)Alexander Zverev (4) v Tallon Griekspoor (26) From 10:45 pm IST Novak Djokovic (1) v Lorenzo Musetti (30) COURT SUZANNE LENGLEN – FROM 1:30 pm IST Varvara Gracheva v Irina-Camelia BeguBen Shelton (15) v Felix Auger-Aliassime (21)Tomas Machac v Daniil Medvedev (5)Madison Keys (14) v Emma Navarro (22) From 7:30 pm IST Tomas Martin Etcheverry (28) v Casper Ruud (7) COURT SIMONNE MATHIEU – FROM 2:30 pm IST Qinwen Zheng (7) v Elina AvanesyanHubert Hurkacz (8) v Denis ShapovalovBianca Andreescu v Jasmine Paolini (12)Jozef Kovalik v Holger Rune (13)Taylor Fritz (12) v Thanasi Kokkinakis COURT 14 – FROM 2:30 pm Alex de Minaur (11) v Jan-Lennard StruffZizou Bergs v Grigor Dimitrov (10)Elina Svitolina (15) v Ana BogdanFrancisco Cerundolo (23) v Tommy Paul (14) Published By: Diya Kakkar Published On: Jun 1, 2024

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Novak Djokovic Untroubled At French Open As Fans Hit By Alcohol Ban

Novak Djokovic Untroubled At French Open As Fans Hit By Alcohol Ban

Novak Djokovic reached the French Open last 32 for the 19th successive year on Thursday as Roland Garros organisers banned alcohol from the stands in an effort to counter growing complaints from players over disrespectful, rowdy fans. Defending champion Djokovic cracked 43 winners past Spain’s 63rd-ranked Roberto Carballes Baena to canter to a 6-4, 6-1, 6-2 win. The three-time champion, seeking a record 25th Grand Slam title, goes on to face either Gael Monfils of France or Italian 30th seed Lorenzo Musetti. Djokovic holds a 19-0 winning record against Monfils and has defeated Musetti four times in five meetings. However, the Italian gave the Serb a major scare at the French Open in 2021 when he won the first two sets before having to retire injured in the decider. “It was a difficult match against Roberto. He hit a lot of very good and precise shots,” said Djokovic. “The last game of the first set I played really well and started to play at a higher level. At the end of the match I was then playing very well.” Also easing through to the third round on another rain-hit day in the French capital were women’s title contenders Aryna Sabalenka and Elena Rybakina. However, the behaviour of fans at the tournament, which was brought into focus by Belgium’s David Goffin’s claim that he had chewing gum spat at him, prompted a series of measures to clampdown on loutish behaviour. “Alcohol has been allowed in the stadiums until now but that’s over,” tournament director Amelie Mauresmo told reporters. However, alcohol including beer from mobile vendors, will still be sold around the grounds. Mauresmo said fans will be ejected if they throw something at a player and that “umpires have tighter, even more precise instructions on keeping the crowd under control”. Fourth seed Alexander Zverev, who effectively ended Rafael Nadal’s French Open career in the first round, defeated Goffin 7-6 (7/4), 6-2, 6-2. Zverev arrived in Paris on the back of winning the Rome Open title and is the only player to reach the semi-finals at the last three French Open tournaments. On Friday, a Berlin court will hear an appeal by Zverev against a fine for allegedly assaulting his ex-girlfriend. He received a 450,000-euro ($487,000) fine in October but appealed the ruling earlier this year, leading to a full trial. The 27-year-old is not required to attend the proceedings and insisted on the eve of the tournament that he “believes in the German system”. On Thursday, he refused to further discuss the case. “I have said everything before the tournament,” he said. After only nine singles matches were played after a Wednesday washout, 55 second round ties were scheduled on Thursday. Amongst early winners were world number two Sabalenka who fired 27 winners past Japanese qualifier Moyuka Uchijima to win 6-2, 6-2. ‘Blanket and tea’ The two-time Australian Open champion, a semi-finalist in Paris in 2023, has made at least the last four at her past six Grand Slams and is expected to be Iga Swiatek’s chief rival in the Pole’s quest for a fourth French Open title. Sabalenka will take on close friend Paula Badosa of Spain for a place in the last 16. “It’s not the best weather. I feel like going back to the hotel. Getting a blanket and hot tea, and Netflix,” said the Belarusian who had the benefit of playing under the roof of Court Philippe Chatrier. Fourth-seeded Rybakina, the only woman to defeat Swiatek on clay this year, was similarly untroubled. She eased past Arantxa Rus of the Netherlands 6-3, 6-4. Former world number one Daniil Medvedev moved into the last 32 after his opponent Miomir Kecmanovic retired with injury while trailing the fifth seed 6-1, 5-0. (This story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.) Topics mentioned in this article

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Novak Djokovic

Monte Carlo Masters: Novak Djokovic loses in semis as title-less run in 2024 extends

World No.1 Novak Djokovic continued his trophy-less run in 2024, losing to Casper Ruud on Saturday, 13 April. Playing in the semi-final of the Monte Carlo Masters, Djokovic lost to the Norwegian star in a three-set battle. Djokovic has been in horrific form in the 2024 season, failing to win a single trophy so far. On the day, Djokovic lost the first set 4-6 but made a tremendous comeback straightaway. Djokovic won the second set 6-4 but ended up getting outclassed by Ruud in the third and final set of the match. In his previous appearance at the Indian Wells, back in March, Djokovic was beaten by Lucky Loser Lucas Nardi in the Round of 32. Djokovic, who lost the Australian Open semi-final to Stefanos Tsitsipas, had earlier said that he was hoping to quickly break his ‘negative cycle’ with a victory in the coming weeks, hitting at his participation in Miami. Notably, it was the first time since 2019 that Djokovic competed at Indian Wells. “No titles this year, that’s not something I’m used to. I was starting the season most of my career with a Grand Slam win or, you know, Dubai win, or any tournament,” Djokovic had said. “I guess every trophy that eventually comes my way is going to be great, obviously to break the kind of negative cycle a little bit I’m having in the last three, four tournaments where I haven’t really been close to my best,” he had added after losing at the Indian Wells. RUUD VS TSITSIPAS IN FINAL Casper Ruud set up the final against red-hot Stefanos Tsitsipas. Two-time champion Tsitsipas stunned second seed Jannik Sinner 6-4 3-6 6-4 to advance to the final of the Monte-Carlo Masters on Saturday. The 25-year-old Greek, who has won the title in 2021 and 2022, kept his cool after a near-flawless display in the opening set to stop Sinner from producing a stirring comeback after the Italian roared back to take a 3-0 lead in the second set. Sinner continued to build momentum after levelling things up and raced to a 4-3 lead in the decider before an injury on his right leg forced him to take a medical timeout. The 22-year-old Italian continued the match but proved no match for Tsitsipas who re-asserted himself to win three games in a row and clinched the match. “It was tennis at the highest level that I have been able to play,” Tsitsipas said after the match. “He is one of the toughest opponents I have faced so far… to find a way when there were not many, I am extremely proud of that,” concluded the Greek player. Published By: Kingshuk Kusari Published On: Apr 13, 2024

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