The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Djokovic’s next foe cleared of matchfixin­g

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PARIS — In his record 12th French Open quarterfin­al, Novak Djokovic will face a man he knows well, even if the rest of the world does not.

What a tale Marco Cecchinato (it’s pronounced Cheh-key-NAH’-toe) can tell, though. He is a 25-yearold from Sicily who once was handed a match-fixing suspension that later was thrown out on appeal. His tour-level career record was 4-23 before this season. His Grand Slam record was 0-4 before last week.

Yet here he is, earning the right to face Djokovic for a spot in the semifinals at Roland Garros by eliminatin­g the No. 8-seeded David Goffin 7-5, 4-6, 6-0, 6-3 on Sunday. How surprising is this run? Cecchinato’s ranking of No. 72 is the lowest in a decade for a man in the final eight at the French Open.

Asked whether he could have envisioned, even as recently as April, that he would get this far at a major tournament, Cecchinato answered with one word, “No,” before breaking into as wide a smile as can be.

“For me,” he continued, “this is the best moment of my life.”

Cecchinato and Djokovic, who meet Tuesday, have crossed paths often in Monte Carlo. Djokovic, a 12-time major champion, lives there; Cecchinato has worked on his game at an academy there.

“I have known of him for many years,” Djokovic said after his 6-3, 6-4, 6-2 victory over No. 30 Fernando Ver-

dasco.

Yes, Djokovic was thrilled to get back to a ninth consecutiv­e quarterfin­al in Paris after dealing with elbow trouble for more than a year and needing surgery in February. And in other men’s action Sunday, No. 2 seed Alexander Zverev was relieved to win a third consecutiv­e five-setter — after trailing 2-1 in sets each time — to get to his first Grand Slam quarterfin­al, where he will face No. 8 Dominic Thiem.

But one of these is not like the others.

At all.

In July 2016, Cecchinato was one of three Italian players initially suspended by their national tennis federation for allegedly influencin­g the outcome of matches. He was banned for 18 months and fined 40,000 euros (about $45,000), accused of losing on purpose during a lower-tier Challenger event at Morocco in 2015.

Cecchinato appealed, and the Italian Olympic Committee announced in December 2016 that the sanctions were dropped entirely.

 ?? Christophe Ena / Associated Press ?? Novak Djokovic cheers after defeating Fernando Verdasco during the fourth round of the French Open on Sunday in Paris.
Christophe Ena / Associated Press Novak Djokovic cheers after defeating Fernando Verdasco during the fourth round of the French Open on Sunday in Paris.

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