The Jerusalem Post

Schwartzma­n outlasts Thiem, earns semifinal duel vs Nadal

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PARIS ( Reuters) – Jewish tennis player Diego Schwartzma­n survived a marathon match against Dominic Thiem to win a quarterfin­als classic 7- 6( 1), 5- 7, 6- 7( 6), 7- 6( 5), 6- 2 at the French Open late Tuesday.

The 12th- seeded Schwartzma­n, a 28- year- old from Argentina, prevailed in five hours and eight minutes to advance to his first Grand Slam semifinal.

Thiem, the third seed, was a finalist in 2018 and 2019, losing to Rafael Nadal both years. The Austrian won the US Open last month in New York.

Schwartzma­n’s semifinal opponent will be Nadal, as the second- seeded Spaniard pulled away from Italy’s Jannik Sinner for a 7- 6( 4), 6- 4, 6- 1 win Tuesday.

Schwartzma­n earned his first five- set victory at Roland Garros.

“Dominic is one of the best players right now in the world. Win the last Grand Slam, two times final here,” Schwartzma­n said after the match. “We are friends. I have a lot of respect for him. And that’s why this match is so very, very important for me.

“I think at the end, this night I deserved to win.” Schwartzma­n fought back from a 4- 2 deficit to win the first set, only to narrowly drop the next two.

And Thiem came out swinging in the fourth set, grabbing a quick win on serve and then breaking Schwartzma­n’s serve to take a 2- 0 lead. But Schwartzma­n managed to break Thiem’s serve the next two times around, turning a two- game deficit into a 4- 2 lead.

“In the third set, I was out of my mind... I was crazy, screaming,” Schwartzma­n said. “I was just so nervous because I saw the chance today and I didn’t take it in the second and the third.”

But he did in the fourth against the 27- year- old Thiem, who survived another five- set marathon on Sunday against Frenchman Hugo Gaston to advance to the quarterfin­als.

Schwartzma­n and Thiem played an unbelievab­le 376 points in all, with Schwartzma­n winning 197 of them. Each won 62 percent of the points on his first serve.

Thiem hit 65 winners but made 81 unforced errors, compared to 47 and 62, respective­ly, for Schwartzma­n.

Thiem said after the match, which he called “enjoyable,” that he was delighted that Schwartzma­n will have a chance to play in his first Grand Slam semifinal.

“We both gave everything,” the world No. 3 said. “The thing in tennis is there is one winner and one loser. Despite I’m so disappoint­ed, I’m still happy for him.”

With the win, the world No. 14 Schwartzma­n will move into the top 10 of the rankings for the first time in his career. He lost in the finals of the recent Internazio­nali BNL d’Italia in Rome to Novak Djokovic, having beaten Nadal in the quarterfin­als.

Nadal, meanwhile, marches on in a bid for his 13th title on the clay courts in Paris. He broke serve at the end of the first set to force a tiebreaker, which he won, but Sinner bounced back to grab a 3- 1 lead in the second set. The rest of the match belonged to Nadal, who won 11 of the final 13 games.

Nadal expects a tough challenge from Schwartzma­n. “He’s coming with big confidence, no? Two weeks in a row,” Nadal said. “He’s in the final in Rome, he’s in the semifinals here. He beat me there. It’s a plus of confidence for him. I know that.

“I’m going to try to go on court, play my best, try to play my game, play aggressive, try to do something a little bit different than what I did in Rome, of course. Hope to be ready to play my best. That’s what I need. That’s what I am looking for. I’m going to give my best until the end.”

On the women’s side, fourth seed Sofia Kenin claimed her maiden French Open semifinal spot as she fought to a 6- 4, 4- 6, 6- 0 victory against fellow American Danielle Collins on Wednesday.

On TV: French Open late- round coverage ( live on Eurosport from noon).

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