Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

Kenin rallies for win over Ferro, reaches quarterfin­als

- By Howard Fendrich and Jerome Pugmire

PARIS » After Sofia Kenin dropped the opening set in the French Open’s fourth round Monday, her father, Alexander, who is also her coach, switched seats in the stands, plopping himself down right next to her opponent’s coach.

So much for social distancing amid a pandemic.

Whether the elder Kenin’s move, so noticeable in the sea of empty beige seats at Court Philippe Chatrier, actually influenced the outcome can’t be known with any certainty — the chair umpire did give a warning for coaching, which isn’t allowed during Grand Slam matches; the 2020 Australian Open champion said her dad merely helped by “motivating” — things did turn around soon afterward.

Never before a quarterfin­alist at any tour-level clay- court tournament, Kenin reached that stage at Roland Garros by making a key adjustment, taking balls sooner and leaving Fiona Ferro less time to operate in the 21-yearold American’s 2-6, 6-2, 6-1 victory over the last player from France in either singles bracket.

“First of all, I mean, I don’t know, like, why HER coach sat in that section,” said Kenin, who is seeded No. 4, while the 49thranked Ferro was unseeded.

“On the right, it’s (for) the higher seed. I would imagine that he would be sitting on the other side. I didn’t really understand why he was sitting there,” the 21-yearold American said, shrugging. “Yeah, I mean, my dad sat there. He tried to help me. ... I mean, he just sat there — and it worked. There’s nothing much to discuss about that.”

As f or Emmanuel Planque, Ferro’s coach?

“At the end of the match,”

Ferro said with a laugh, “he told me, ‘ You didn’t manage to get rid of Sofia, but I couldn’t get rid of her dad.’”

A year ago in Paris, Kenin signaled to the world what she was capable of, upsetting Serena Williams in the third round.

“This used to be a surface that I really don’t like,” said Kenin, who wiped away tears with a towel at match’s end. “Now it’s obviously a surface that I really enjoy playing on.”

She needed to wait a day to find out who she’ll play next, because the match between No. 30 Ons Jabeur of Tunisia and Danielle Collins of the U.S., scheduled for open-air Suzanne Lenglen Court, was postponed by rain.

The other quarterfin­al in that half of the draw will be two-time Wimbledon champion Petra Kvitova against Laura Siegemund.

The men’s quarterfin­als establishe­d Monday are both rematches: No. 1 Novak Djokovic against No. 17 Pablo Carreño Busta, and No. 5 Stefanos Tsitsipas against No. 13 Andrey Rublev.

Djokovic dealt with what amounted to the closest thing to a challenge he’s faced so far in the tournament in his 6- 4, 6-3, 6-3 win over No. 15 seed Karen Khachanov — the 2016 champion has dropped a total of 25 games in four matches. What drew attention was what the 17time Grand Slam champion termed “very awkward déjà vu.”

It was, to be perfectly clear, entirely an accident, more of a fluke than anything else, when Djokovic stretched wide of the doubles alley to try to return a first-set serve, the ball ricochetin­g off his racket frame and into the head of a seated line judge.

Still, different as it was, the moment conjured memories of the U. S. Open, where Djokovic was disqualifi­ed from his fourthroun­d match against Carreño Busta for striking a ball that unintentio­nally hit a line judge in the throat. That one happened after Djokovic dropped a game in the first set; he hit a ball in anger while walking to the sideline.

On Monday, it happened in the course of play, and Djokovic immediatel­y went over to check on the man, who shook it off and signaled a thumbsup. Djokovic’s match continued apace, putting him in the French Open quarterfin­als for the 11th consecutiv­e year, extending a record he — no, not 12-time champion Rafael Nadal — already held.

“I mean, obviously because of what happened in New York, people, I guess, are going to make (a) story out of this,” Djokovic said. “It has happened to me, and to many other players, in the last 15 years that I’ve been on the tour.”

This v ic t or y moved Djokovic into his 47th Grand Slam quarterfin­al. Carreño Busta got to his fourth, and second at Roland Garros, by beating 186th-ranked qualifier Daniel Altmaier 6-2, 7-5, 6-2.

Djokovic is seeking a second French Open championsh­ip and 18th major trophy overall. Among men, only Federer, with 20, and Nadal, with 19, have won more.

 ?? ALESSANDRA TARANTINO - STAFF, AP ?? Sofia Kenin throws her racket during her fourth-round French Open match against Fiona Ferro at Roland Garros stadium in Paris, France, on Monday, Oct. 5.
ALESSANDRA TARANTINO - STAFF, AP Sofia Kenin throws her racket during her fourth-round French Open match against Fiona Ferro at Roland Garros stadium in Paris, France, on Monday, Oct. 5.

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