The Independent on Saturday

Nadal storms into final

Halep hoping to be fourth-time lucky against Stephens

- MARTYN HERMAN

STEVE KEATING

MONTREAL: With six Canadian Grand Prix wins Lewis Hamilton and Mercedes have routinely flexed their muscles at the Circuit Gilles Villeneuve, but the Silver Arrows could be a little frail tomorrow with an engine suffering from a power shortage.

On one of Formula One’s power circuits, that could prove a double whammy for championsh­ip leader Hamilton as he bids to match Michael Schumacher’s mark of seven victories in Canada against rivals who will all be on upgraded power units.

Mercedes said on Wednesday that they would delay the introducti­on of a power unit upgrade until after this weekend’s race due to a quality issue, while Ferrari and Renault, who supply Red Bull, will deliver new engines.

Mercedes, Ferrari and Red Bull have each won two races this season.

While Ferrari and Red Bull will have fresh engines, Mercedes will go with the same power unit.

“It will be the seventh race on the engine and the goal is to make the engines stay the same the whole way through but naturally if it is degraded you lose horsepower ...and on a power circuit that will be magnified,” Hamilton said.

“If the others are bringing upgrades and have fresh engines we won’t be in position to fight,” he added.

“It is a power circuit and there is power lost over the life of an engine. All that I am hoping for is reliabilit­y. I am still here to win, we’re going to give it everything we’ve got that’s for sure.”

Even with a diminished power unit Hamilton cannot be overlooked on one of his favourite tracks.

The Briton has started from pole six times and can set a new mark if he claims top spot on the grid again today. – Reuters

RUTHLESS Rafael Nadal punished Juan Martin del Potro for missed opportunit­ies as he reached his 11th French Open final with a 6-4, 6-1, 6-2 victory yesterday.

Argentine Del Potro often had Nadal in trouble in a ferocious first set but paid heavily for failing to convert any of the six break points that came his way at 1-1 and 4-4.

Ten-time champion Nadal then pounced in the 10th game to take the opening set and fifth seed Del Potro’s challenge evaporated in the Court Philippe Chatrier sunshine.

Nadal took a strangleho­ld on the match and powered on to victory in two hours 14 minutes to set up a final tomorrow against Austria’s seventh seed Dominic Thiem.

World No 1 Simona Halep gets a fourth chance to finally win a Grand Slam title when she starts as favourite in the French Open final against American Sloane Stephens today. The 26-year-old has pedigree on clay, knows what it feels like to step out on Court Philippe Chatrier to contest the title match and holds a 5-2 winning record over Stephens.

She is also playing arguably the best tennis of her career.

There is one major sticking point though, Halep has always fallen just short when the big prizes have been tantalisin­gly within reach – twice in the French Open final and also in this year’s Australian Open final.

Tenth seed Stephens, the first American not called Williams to reach the Roland Garros final since Jennifer Capriati in 2001, by contrast has a perfect record in Grand Slam finals having beaten friend Madison Keys to win last year’s US Open.

Romanian Halep’s best chance came last year when she was a set and 3-0 ahead against unseeded Latvian Jelena Ostapenko, only to suffer a heartbreak­ing defeat.

In Australia in January she ran out of gas on a steamy Melbourne night against Denmark’s Caroline Wozniacki but after a relatively comfortabl­e passage through the Paris draw, she will be firing on all cylinders this time.

While the match is a huge occasion for Stephens, seven-times French Open champion Chris Evert believes Halep needs it more.

“I think tomorrow is a bigger moment for Simona Halep than it is for Sloane Stephens,” Evert, a Eurosport analyst, said yesterday. “Simona has had three crushing losses in the finals, she is still searching for the elusive Grand Sam title.

“To me, it is really going to depend on who’s the most fearless and who’s going to come out the box and play more aggressive tennis. To me, that’s the deciding factor.”

A year ago Stephens, 25, could hardly have imagined contesting Grand Slam finals – let alone having won one already by the time she turned up in Paris this year.

After the 2016 Rio Olympics she spent nearly a year sidelined with a foot injury and did not play at last year’s French Open. As comebacks go, it has been remarkable.

“Obviously a lot of hard work went into it, a lot of adversity, a lot of ups and downs,” she said. “A lot of emotions, like ‘am I ever going to be the same? Am I ever going to play good again at a high enough level?’”

Having known the frustratio­n of time away from the court perhaps explains her almost trance-like calm in the heat of battle – always appearing unruffled.

Halep is more emotive on court and her tenacity has earned her an army of fans. She will be the popular favourite today, if only for her sheer perseveran­ce.

“Okay, let’s make a deal. I will play for the fans from all over the world because I know that many are hoping me to win this Grand Slam finally,” she said.

“I will put everything I have on the court. I will think that I will make many people happy. So maybe I will have enough power to win it.” – Reuters

 ??  ?? POWER PLAY: Spain’s Rafael Nadal returns during his semi-final win over Argentina’s Juan Martin Del Potro at Roland Garro yesterday.
POWER PLAY: Spain’s Rafael Nadal returns during his semi-final win over Argentina’s Juan Martin Del Potro at Roland Garro yesterday.

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