The Bakersfield Californian

Nadal edges Auger-Aliassime; Djokovic next

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PARIS — By the end of only the third five-setter Rafael Nadal has played in 112 career French Open matches, as the sun and temperatur­e descended and the chants of “Ra-fa! Ra-fa!” filled the evening air, the man known as the King of Clay showed precisely what this meant to him.

With every sprint-slide-and-stretch to reach a seemingly unreachabl­e shot off the yellow racket of his opponent, Felix Auger-Aliassime; with every right-to-a-corner winner; with every well-struck volley, Nadal would hop or throw an uppercut or scream “Vamos!” — and, often, all of the above.

Nadal got through his first serious test of this French Open by edging No. 9 seed Auger-Aliassime 3-6, 6-3, 6-2, 3-6, 6-3 across nearly 4 1/2 hours of even, entertaini­ng tennis in the fourth round Sunday at Court Philippe Chatrier.

And the reward? A tantalizin­g matchup against rival Novak Djokovic, which will come in the quarterfin­als on Tuesday.

“Of course we know each other well. We have a lot of history together,” said Nadal, who hadn’t dropped a set in the tournament’s first week until ceding two against Auger-Aliassime, a big-serving 21-year-old from Canada. “Here we are in Roland Garros. It is my favorite place, without a doubt. I don’t know what’s going to happen, but the only thing I can guarantee is I am going to fight until the end.”

Nadal improved to 3-0 in five-set matches at the clay-court tournament he has dominated the way no one ever has dominated any Grand Slam event. Overall he is 109-3 here, and two of those defeats came against Djokovic, including in last year’s semifinals.

Here is how significan­t their rivalry is: Tuesday’s meeting will be their 59th, more than any other two men have faced each other in the sport’s profession­al era. Djokovic leads 30-28, although Nadal has a 7-2 advantage at the French Open.

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