Houston Chronicle

Teenagers Sinner, Swiatek stun with upset victories

- By John Leicester

PARIS — On a Sunday of upsets among the women at the French Open, revengewas a dish served up in an autumnal chill by a Polish teenager.

And it was only partially business as usual for the men, too. Rafael Nadal advanced, but his opponent in his 14th quarterfin­al at Roland Garros will be dangerous debutant Jannik Sinner. By making the men’s last eight as a newcomer, the 19-year- old Italian matched a feat last achieved by Nadal himself, in 2005, on his march to the first of his 12 titles in Paris.

So impressive has Sinner been on the clay that his 6-3, 6-3, 4-6, 6-3 win against U.S. Open finalist Alexander Zverev hardly seemed like an upset, despite the 68-spot gulf separating them in tour rankings. Sinner pulled the sixth-seeded German this way and that with precision groundstro­kes and unfurled his wingspan to make 21winners at the net.

Zverev said he was sick, so feverish and short of breath that “I shouldn’t have played.”

Sinner said that fromhis side of the net, his opponent seemed “quite okay, you know, because in the third and fourth set he was running quite a lot.”

Against fourth-round foe Sebastian Korda, a 20year- old qualifier who idolizes him so much that he named his cat “Rafa,” Nadal was — excuse the pun — practicall­y purr-fect, win-ning 6-1, 6-1, 6-2.

Korda lapped it up. His long-term sights are set on winning at least two Grand Slam titles, one more than his dad, 1998 Australian Open champion Petr Korda. In the meantime, the spanking from Nadal was “definitely the best moment of my life.”

Nadal has yet to drop a set in his pursuit of a 13th French Open crown that would be his 20th major title overall, tying Roger Federer’s record.

Although Nadal and Sinner have practiced together, their match will be the first between the 34-yearold and the youngest man in a Grand Slam quarterfin­al since Novak Djokovic in 2006.

“A big challenge,” Nadal said. “Amazing potential. He move the hand very quick and he’s able to produce amazing shots.”

That’s also true of the new generation making a mark in the women’s draw of this French Open where most everything feels unusual because of its coronaviru­s- enforced shift from May-June. The golden leaves and cold of autumn have added to a sense of cyclical change.

Against the player who humbled her 6-1, 6-0 at the same stage last year, 19year- old Iga Swiatek turned the tables on topseeded Simona Halep, sending the 2018 champion packing 6-1, 6-2 with powerful groundstro­kes and exquisite net play to advance to her first Grand Slam quarterfin­al.

Halep, who also lifted the title at Wimbledon last year, never got into her stride under the roof on Court Philippe Chatrier and was unable to exert any pressure on the now-confident Polish player who wilted with nerves in their fourth-round meeting last year that was over in just 45 minutes.

Swiatek used that defeat as fuel.

“A huge lesson,” she said. “I knew that I can, like, play differentl­y and I can finally show my best tennis.”

Halep lasted just 23 minutes longer this time. She never had a break point against her opponent who racked up 14 against her, breaking her twice in each set and keeping her serve under near- constant stress.

“She was everywhere,” said Halep, who had been on a career-best winning streak of 17 matches. “I will have a chocolate and I will be better tomorrow.”

 ?? Anne-Christine Poujoulat / Getty Images ?? Nineteen-year-old Jannik Sinner dives for the return in a victory over Alexander Zverev on Sunday.
Anne-Christine Poujoulat / Getty Images Nineteen-year-old Jannik Sinner dives for the return in a victory over Alexander Zverev on Sunday.
 ?? Alessandra Tarantino / Associated Press ?? Iga Swiatek, another 19-year-old, celebrates a win as her opponent Simona Halep's return falls short.
Alessandra Tarantino / Associated Press Iga Swiatek, another 19-year-old, celebrates a win as her opponent Simona Halep's return falls short.

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