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Rafael Nadal beats Dominic Thiem to win his 11th French Open title! [Update Post #26]

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Novak Djokovic is out of the French Open after Italy's Marco Cecchinato beat him to reach the semi-finals in a huge shock in Paris.

Djokovic, 31, saved three match points and missed three set points before the world number 72 finally won 6-3 7-6 (7-4) 1-6 7-6 (13-11).

Cecchinato, 25, had never won a main-draw match at a Grand Slam before this year's Roland Garros.

He will face Austria's Dominic Thiem in the last four.

Their meeting on Friday means there is guaranteed to be at least one first-time Slam finalist.

Seventh seed Thiem reached his third Roland Garros semi-final with a straight-set win against Germany's second seed Alexander Zverev, who also struggled with injury.

Cecchinato, who was banned for match-fixing in 2016 before having the suspension overturned, is the first Italian man to reach a Grand Slam semi-final since 1978.

He is also the lowest-ranked player to reach this stage at Roland Garros since world number 100 Andrei Medvedev in 1999.

Cecchinato knocked out eighth seed David Goffin and 10th seed Pablo Carreno Busta in previous rounds, and said the achievement had "changed his life".

"Maybe I'm sleeping. It's amazing, it's unbelievable for me. I'm very happy because it's unbelievable to beat Novak Djokovic in a quarter-final at Roland Garros," he added.

And on the winning match point, he said: "When I saw my return hit the line it was the best moment of my life."

https://www.bbc.com/sport/tennis/44375046
 
Beginning of the end for Djoker now that he is at the rip old age of 31 :misbah3




Not everyone is Federer to keep winning grand slams well into their 30s.
 
That 4th set tie break was superb. Couldn’t believe some of the balls Djokovic missed though - 3 set points, 3 mid court balls sitting up to be smashed and he messed them all up.

Also, while Djokovic was a class act at the end when congratulating his opponent he was a complete dick in the way he shouted at the ball boy (for his towel).
 
Defending champion Rafael Nadal reached his 11th French Open semi-final after ruthlessly turning around his rain-delayed quarter-final against Argentine 11th seed Diego Schwartzman.

Top seed Nadal, 32, trailed 6-4 3-5 when play was halted on Wednesday.

The world number one, bidding for a record-extending 11th title, clinched the second set soon after the restart.

And he lost just four games in an hour and 42 minutes on court on Thursday on his way to a 4-6 6-3 6-2 6-2 victory.

The Spaniard will face either Marin Cilic or Juan Martin del Potro, whose unfinished quarter-final was also moved over to Thursday, in Friday's semi-final.

Whoever reaches the final from that side of the draw will face either Austrian seventh seed Dominic Thiem or unseeded Italian Marco Cecchinato in Sunday's final.

https://www.bbc.com/sport/tennis/44398392
 
Robin Söderling, one of only two players to get the better of Rafael Nadal at Roland Garros, nine years ago in the fourth round, said on Thursday the Spaniard could add as many as four French Open titles to the 10 he has already collected.

“Maybe he’s not moving as good as he did five, six, 10 years ago,” the Swede said of Nadal, who had just seen off the determined Argentinian Diego Schwartzman 4-6, 6-3, 6-2, 6-2 in the held-over quarter-final on Court Philippe-Chatrier.

“But it’s a very small difference. I would say he’s probably as good now as before and it’s just amazing. If he can stay injury-free there is nothing that says he can’t win this two, three, four times more. It’s unbelievable.”

Nadal at 32 is as locked in to his mission as on the day he announced his arrival here by beating another Argentinian, Mariano Puerta, in the 2005 final and embarked on one of sport’s great odysseys.

In the semi-final on Friday he plays another – considerably taller – Argentinian in 6ft 8in Juan Martín del Potro, who finished a tougher assignment against the No 3 seed, Marin Cilic, 7-6 (5), 5-7, 6-3, 7-5, in just under four hours on Court Suzanne-Lenglen, in a battle of two former US Open champions.

Nadal says his status on clay is neither a hindrance nor an advantage. “I just go on court knowing that every match is difficult and I can lose and I can win,” he said. The stormy Parisian weather has not helped, as he told Spanish journalists: “Thunder woke me up at 3am and I had trouble going back to sleep. But apart from that I’m resting well.”

Söderling, who had his moment in the sun two years before glandular fever forced him to quit the game at 27, observed: “Even though he won it 10 times, he’s here to win 11 times. He looks even hungrier than when he won it the first time. He didn’t lose any motivation at all. It’s amazing to see. I’m really impressed about the way he plays his backhand now. Even when players put a lot of pace on his backhand he’s defending really well.

“To beat him on clay, I would say the only chance for any player now is to be really aggressive. It’s an extremely difficult task. You have to take a lot of risks. Of course, he’s the favourite. But nothing is impossible.”

For Del Potro there were tears, not for the first time. The No 5 seed broke down on court after coming through a testing match against Cilic, cross at himself for losing his temper with a spectator after double-faulting to hand his opponent a 5-4 lead in the second.

They resumed at 5-5 in the tie-break and spent another couple of wearying hours in the sun. Del Potro looked spent at the finish but forged an emotional bond with the crowd as he spoke. He has come through three wrist surgeries in the past four years and at one stage contemplated walking away from tennis. “It was very important for me to have the support of my family and friends in the months when I could not play. I feel at home whenever I play here.”

As for the task awaiting him in the semi-finals, he told the crowd: “It’s going to be the challenge that every player wants. I don’t know if I will win but I will take big love from you. Is more important to me.”

There is, however, an elephant in the room at this otherwise uplifting party: Marco Cecchinato. His should be the fairytale of the tournament and, to a large extent, it is: the 25-year-old Italian, ranked 72 in the world, who came from two sets down to win 10-8 in the fifth of his opening match and went on to put the former champion Novak Djokovic out in a heart-stopping quarter-final.

Yet allegations of match-fixing have hung over him for nearly three years, even though he was allowed off on a technicality when the Italian federation failed to meet a deadline in the appeals process.

As detailed in the New York Times last year Italian investigators tapped into WhatsApp messages between Cecchinato and his friend Riccardo Accardi that suggested he might recoup betting losses on Italian football at the 2015 Mohammedia Challenger in Morocco. Accardi and his father used multiple accounts to bet on Cecchinato at 7-1 to lose in straight sets to the world No 338 Kamil Majchrzak, which he did.

Cecchinato denied the allegations and appealed – and the Italian federation’s processes broke down to the extent that he escaped without censure. The Tennis Integrity Unit did not respond to Guardian inquiries on Thursday as to whether they were taking the investigation any further.

Cecchinato, the first Italian to get this far since Corrado Barazzutti 40 years ago and the longest long shot since 100th-ranked Andrei Medvedev reached the final in 1999, will play Dominic Thiem in the first semi-final on Friday. On Thursday, the Roland Garros website posted a heartwarming video of Cecchinato meeting his hero, Marat Safin, for the first time.

The player will talk about anything on the eve of the biggest day of his career – except the dark mark on his CV. “I don’t want to speak for that,” he said after the most stunning match of his career. “I want to think for this moment in my life. And so next time, no, please. Thank you.”

Next time will be interesting.

https://www.theguardian.com/sport/2...s-hard-victory-schwartzman-french-open-tennis
 
Hopefully Rafa win this, again..

I'm expecting and want Theim to outdo him. Tennis is becoming predictable again with Federer winning the hard courts and the grass with Rafa winning the clay. It's time someone else actually wins.
 
Dominic Thiem has made the final but who will he play? Will it be Nadal or Del Potro?
 
PARIS — On his favorite tennis court, Rafael Nadal was struggling on Friday. He looked hesitant and edgy, as if he might not be able to finish what he had started.

But this had nothing to do with winning or losing his French Open semifinal against Juan Martín del Potro, whom Nadal had just manhandled, 6-4, 6-1, 6-2, to earn a spot in the final against Dominic Thiem.

This was about Nadal, the pride of Spain, trying to do his postmatch interview in French.

He stopped short for a long moment, searching for words, then nodded his head with renewed determination and reeled off the rest of a response.

“I’m very happy to return to the final at Roland Garros,” he said. “For me, it’s incredible.”

For everyone else, however, it has become as normal as the Seine flowing under the Pont des Arts. Nadal is a part of the Paris landscape now; his success at Roland Garros is a rite of spring.

The struggle to answer in French on Friday — he remains much more comfortable in English as a second language — looked a lot more nerve-racking than some of his matches.

But Nadal, 32, is nothing if not a hard worker who loves a challenge, and even if winning another French Open would hardly be a novelty, that should not diminish the achievement.

“He is, for me, the best competitor I ever saw in any sport, and I watch sport a lot for many, many years,” said Günter Bresnik, Thiem’s 57-year-old coach. “Nadal’s capable of keeping this very aggressive, high-intensity level over an unbelievably long period of time. And he practices that way, too. There is no difference between practices and matches. I always hear from players that in a match they will do it differently, but if you don’t practice that way, you are not going to do it in the heat of the battle. And Nadal has been doing it for years and years and years.”

Nadal will be chasing his 11th singles title here on Sunday, if rain does not push the final to next week. A victory over Thiem would allow him to equal Margaret Court’s career record of 11 singles titles in one major tournament. (Court won hers at the Australian Open, bridging the amateur and professional eras.)

But this year’s final is already different from any of Nadal’s previous 10 in Paris or any of his 13 other Grand Slam finals.

He is at last facing someone from a younger tennis generation instead of contemporaries like Novak Djokovic, 31, or an elder like Roger Federer, who will turn 37 in August.

The seventh-seeded Thiem, a 24-year-old Austrian, is, along with Alexander Zverev, one of the leaders of the new wave in men’s tennis. Of players under 28, only Thiem and Milos Raonic, 27, have reached major singles finals. Raonic lost in the 2016 Wimbledon final to Andy Murray.

If Thiem wins on Sunday, he will be the youngest man to win at Roland Garros since Nadal won at 24 in 2010.

He has proved that he is a major threat to Nadal in best-of-three-set matches on clay, beating him three times, most recently in straight sets in the quarterfinals of the Masters 1000 event in Madrid this year.

“For sure, I can take some things off that,” Thiem said. “If I want to beat him, I have to play that way, like I did in Rome and in Madrid. But I’m also aware that here it’s tougher. He likes the conditions more here than in Madrid, for sure.”

Thiem has yet to prove that he can stay with Nadal in a best-of-five-set match, losing in the second round of the French Open in 2014, 6-2, 6-2, 6-3, and again in the French Open semifinals last year by the lopsided and deflating score of 6-3, 6-4, 6-0 after plenty of prematch buildup.

Now Thiem is back for another attempt after navigating a draw that included the 19th-seeded Kei Nishikori, the second-seeded Zverev and on Friday, the unseeded Italian surprise Marco Cecchinato in a semifinal that Thiem won, 7-5, 7-6 (10), 6-1, after saving three set points in the second-set tiebreaker.

“He’s a big favorite against anybody,” Thiem said of Nadal. “Still, I know how to play against him. I have a plan.”

Most men who face Nadal have a plan. The problem is executing it. Nadal is an astounding 85-2 at Roland Garros, his only defeats coming against Robin Soderling in the fourth round in 2009 and against Djokovic in the quarterfinals in 2015.

The conventional wisdom is that the only way to prevail is to take time away from him, to attack at the first decent opportunity before Nadal strikes first or locks his opponent into a geometric inferno by controlling the baseline exchanges with his whipping forehand and excellent two-handed backhand.

Thiem does indeed have punching power, both with his serve and his groundstrokes, the forehand doing most of the damage. But he is also most comfortable positioning himself deep behind the baseline, which allows Nadal more time to get organized and react. Thiem will have to produce tremendous quality and depth for hours to have a chance to join Soderling’s and Djokovic’s exclusive club.

“Nadal, in Paris, best-of-five, is still half a class above Dominic, half a level too good,” said Bresnik, who has coached Thiem since Thiem was 9.
With that in mind, Bresnik said he did not anticipate a victory for his pupil this year.

“That does not mean I would not love to be wrong,” he said.

He does see new maturity in Thiem, more controlled aggression on critical points and more skill on the attack. He is also convinced that Thiem will not come out “as flat” as he did in last year’s semifinal, which came after Thiem had defeated Djokovic in the quarterfinals.

“It was a poor performance,” Bresnik said. “And I think at that time Dominic had still problems to play against two great players in a row.”

Bresnik likes Thiem’s current state of mind and form after encouraging him to play at the low-level ATP event in Lyon, France, the week before Roland Garros. Thiem ended up winning the title.

Bresnik has taken plenty of flak through the years for pushing Thiem to play such a dense tournament schedule, but the coach has long insisted that it is part of a master plan to build a resilient champion.

“Everybody calls me an idiot, maybe even for good reason,” Bresnik said. “But I like this. And I’m really happy to prove the people wrong, because all the guys who practiced the week or 10 days before Roland Garros, they are already at home for a week.

“Dominic played four matches in Lyon, came here Saturday late at night with the train, practiced the next day and played on Monday. People said: ‘It’s stupid. He’s not going to last.’ But my idea behind this is that to prepare people for handling high pressure, physically and mentally, you have to put them under pressure, well dosed, not too much and not too little, but under pressure.”

But as the record so clearly shows, no one has ever applied more physical and mental pressure for so long to opponents on clay than Nadal.

“As long as Rafa is healthy, it will be very difficult to beat him here,” del Potro said on Friday. “And if he can maintain his desire, I think he can win many more times.”

This year, for a change, it is up to the younger generation to try to stop him.

https://www.nytimes.com/2018/06/08/sports/french-open-thiem-cecchinato.html
 
Women's final in progress

Simona Halep (Rom) meets Sloane Stephens (US) in final of women's singles
 
Pleased ror Halep, she looked like she was going to fall short again in the final, but she dug deep and came through in the end. Sloane looked brilliant in the first set but then seemed to be jolted out of her rhythm by one game where Halep suddenly started charging the net at 2-0 down in the second set.
 
Going to Lauterbourg as some Romanian relatives and friends have invited us to come celebrate Haleps victory.
 
World number one Simona Halep finally won her first Grand Slam title with a gutsy comeback victory over American 10th seed Sloane Stephens in the French Open final.

Halep, who had lost her three previous major finals, went a set and a break down at Roland Garros.

But the 26-year-old Romanian battled back to take a see-saw second set against the US Open champion.

She then raced away with the third to win 3-6 6-4 6-1.

"I did everything I could. It is amazing what is happening now," Halep said.

"I have been dreaming for this moment since I started playing tennis."

Halep clinched victory with her first match point, Stephens unable to return a powerful first serve.

The top seed dropped her racquet in celebration, covering her face with both hands before Stephens walked around the net to warmly hug the champion.

Given a standing ovation by the Court Philippe Chatrier crowd, a tearful Halep climbed into the stand behind the baseline to celebrate with her family and coaching team.

Halep had lost in two previous French Open finals - to Maria Sharapova in 2014 and Jelena Ostapenko in 2017 - and against Caroline Wozniacki in this year's Australian Open showpiece.

The world number one said in the build-up to this match that she felt relaxed and would not be fazed by the pressure of winning her first Slam.

And so it proved as she delivered in front of an expectant crowd.

Halep was the favourite to finally land her first major title against an opponent who is better known for her success on hard courts rather than clay.

But she was beaten by Stephens' brilliance, not herself, in the opening set.

After that Halep took control, winning four games in a row early in the second as momentum turned.

An early break in the third set, with Stephens appearing to tire, put the Romanian in command.

Backed by plenty of noisy Romanian support, Halep broke again for 4-0 after an astonishing point in which she wore Stephens down with her relentless returning.

She raced through a hold to love and, after taking Stephens to deuce, served out to win her first Grand Slam at the 33rd attempt.

Stephens' run to her second Grand Slam final came as a surprise to many, given she had never previously made it past the fourth round at Roland Garros.

The 25-year-old American had won all but one of her six Tour titles - including last year's US Open victory - on a hard court.

But her performances here are further proof she is ready to challenge regularly for more honours.

She will now rise to fourth in the world rankings after dropping to 957th just six weeks before her Flushing Meadows victory, following a foot injury which kept her out for almost a year.

Stephens breezed through the French Open draw, dropping only one set, though she did not face anybody seeded higher until she met Halep.

Many experts predicted a baseline battle in the final - and that is how it turned out.

In the opening set, Stephens' sharp movement across the baseline enabled her to return everything Halep threw at her, while forcing the Romanian into errors and hitting some wonderful winners herself.

However, she could not replicate the same intensity in the second.

Stephens coughed up the first double fault of the match for 0-30 in the fourth game, in the middle of that momentum shift towards Halep, and from there the signs were ominous.

"It's not the trophy I wanted but it is still beautiful," Stephens said.

"Congratulations to Simona. There is no-one else I'd rather lose to than the number one in the world."

Read the full article at : https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/tennis/44425403
 
Got a sneaking feeling Thiem might give Rafa real run for his money for the title today. He looked brilliant in the semi final and I think he's got the tools to win this. 2-2 in the opening set as I write this.
 
Thiem fighting to hang on here, a set and a break down, but there's some outstanding tennis going on. it's a battle royale going on here.
 
World number one Rafael Nadal won an 11th French Open title by beating Austrian Dominic Thiem in straight sets.

Nadal, 32, won 6-4 6-3 6-2 to earn his 17th Grand Slam, three adrift of Roger Federer's all-time men's record.

The Spaniard edged an intense opening set, tightening his grip in the second.

And despite having cramp in the third he increased the tempo further, beating Thiem in his first major final when the 24-year-old returned long.

"Overall, it's a dream to win 11 times," Nadal said.

"It was important to play the way I did. It was a tough moment when I got cramp. He is a player who pushes you to the limit."

The victory means the past six Grand Slam titles have been won by either Nadal or Federer with the next generation of players finding it hard to break the veterans' stranglehold on the game.

Nadal is the only second player in history to win the same Grand Slam on 11 occasions after Margaret Court, who won 11 Australian Open titles between 1960 and 1973.

However, it was not all smooth for Nadal, who missed four match points on his own serve before clinching victory when Thiem went long on the fifth.

Nadal dropped his racquet at the baseline in celebration before turning to his box and raising both hands skywards.

The Spaniard had been the hot favourite to win the second Slam of the year, after warming up with three clay-court titles in Monte Carlo, Barcelona and Rome.

The Majorcan has an air of invincibility at Roland Garros, losing only twice in 87 matches since making his debut in 2005, and again he delivered on his favourite stage.

He had breezed through his opening four matches without dropping a set - extending his own personal best to 37 consecutive sets here - though falling short of Bjorn Borg's all-time record of 41 by losing the opener of his quarter-final against Diego Schwartzman.

That was about as disheartening as it got for the world number one.

Against seventh seed Thiem he was at his destructive best, using his athleticism and mental resilience to wear the Austrian down with his relentless shot-making.

Thiem, playing in his first Grand Slam final, simply had few answers to Nadal's brilliance.

Nadal had made slow starts to his service games in his semi-final against Juan Martin del Potro and Schwartzman, but imposed himself straight away against Thiem by holding to love in the opening game and backing it up with a break in the next.

Thiem did break back in the third game, but had to fend off more chances for Nadal on his own serve - particularly in a 13-minute sixth game - before the Spaniard struck in the final game of the set.

Nadal also stamped his authority early in the second set, breaking again at the first opportunity, as Thiem started to become frustrated.

The Austrian had a chance to break back for 4-3, but his opponent saw it off with a backhand down the line and closed out the set as the inevitable loomed.

Only one player had ever beaten Nadal from two sets down at a Grand Slam - Italian Fabio Fognini at the 2015 US Open.

Thiem never looked like becoming the second.

Nadal refused to ease off at the start of the third, missing five break points in two long service games for the Austrian, who eventually buckled with a wide forehand to trail 2-1.

Nadal broke again for a 5-2 lead, then served out - after suffering cramp in his left arm and missing those match points - to win in two hours and 42 minutes.

See the full article at: https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/tennis/44431333
 
Incredible stuff by Rafa - what a genius. Felt sorry for Thiem - he threw the kitchen sink at Rafa but everything was returned with interest.

The last 6 grand slams have been won by either Rafa or Roger. *checks calendar to check if it really is 2018*
 
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