Qatar Tribune

Andreeva dreams of ‘25 Grand Slams’ on reaching French Open 3rd round

-

SIXTEEN-YEAR-OLD Mirra Andreeva said she dreams of winning 25 Grand Slam titles after reaching the third round of the French Open.

The prodigious Russian talent came through qualifying and has lost just six games in her first two main-draw matches, beating France’s Diane Parry 6-1 6-2 on Thursday.

Andreeva only turned 16 at the end of April and is setting her sights sky high for her tennis career.

“The dream: I know that (Novak) Djokovic, he did 22 Grand Slams, so I want to go until 25, if it will be possible,” said the confident teenager.

Andreeva will try to keep her feet on the ground, though, adding: “As my coach says, to not be like a diva, to stay humble all the time. I don’t think that I have a lot of success now. I didn’t win any tournament­s. I just play. It’s the third round of Roland Garros. I will play.”

Defending champion Iga Swiatek again had a tough first set, this time against American Claire Liu, before pulling away to win 6-4 6-0.

The world number one, who celebrated her 22nd birthday on Wednesday, had difficulty finding her rhythm in windy conditions.

Swiatek would rather play on Philippe Chatrier in the day than at night, though, and revealed she has been requesting not to feature in the late prime-time session.

Every night session so far has consisted of a men’s match despite organizers facing criticism last year for not giving equal billing to the women.

“I felt like I played already night sessions in this clay court swing,” said Swiatek. “Obviously it would be nice if we had women’s matches as well. But I’m not helping.”

Wimbledon champion Elena Rybakina fought off a Czech teenager for the second straight round, following up her success against 16-year-old Brenda Fruhvirtov­a by defeating 18-year-old Linda Noskova 6-3 6-3.

Seventh seed Ons abeur has looked strong so far, the Tunisian seeing off Oceane Dodin 6-2 6-3, while Kayla Day upset American compatriot Madison Keys 6-2 4-6 6-4.

Sinner knocked out after 5-hour epic Meanwhile, eighth seed annik Sinner was toppled by German Daniel Altmaier in a five-hour epic at the French Open on Thursday.

In a tremendous atmosphere on Suzanne Lenglen, Altmaier clinched a 6-7 (0) 7-6 (7) 1-6 7-6 (4) 7-5 second-round victory after five hours and 26 minutes - the fifth longest match in the tournament’s history - having saved two match points when Sinner served for the win in the fourth set.

A tense finale saw Altmaier broken when he served for the match for the first time at 5-4 in the decider and then pegged back from 40-0 at 6-5.

Italian Sinner had three chances to force a deciding tie-break, and chucked his racket to the clay in anger after missing the final one, before Altmaier, ranked 79, took his fifth chance with an ace.

The German, who lost to Sinner in five sets at the US Open, sat in his chair sobbing afterwards, saying: “I love clay and I love the crowd and everything. The emotions were crazy.”

 ?? (AFP) ?? Russia’s Mirra Andreeva in action against France’s Diane Parry at the French Open in Paris on Thursday.
(AFP) Russia’s Mirra Andreeva in action against France’s Diane Parry at the French Open in Paris on Thursday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Qatar