The Sentinel-Record

Nadal powers into fourth round with French Open streaks intact

- HOWARD FENDRICH

PARIS — Right from the getgo in Court Philippe Chatrier, things were not looking good for Rafael Nadal’s latest French Open foil: The 10-time champion at Roland Garros won the first 12 points against Richard Gasquet.

“I started badly,” Gasquet would say later.

Well, that’s one possible explanatio­n. Another is much simpler. To wit: He was facing the mighty Nadal — winner of all 16 matches this pair has played against each other as profession­als — and on red clay, to boot. Nadal eventually lost points, of course, but never really relented in a meaningful way en route to a 6-3, 6-2, 6-2 third-round victory that was only his latest declaratio­n of dominance on this surface and at this Grand Slam tournament.

“Once he’s ahead,” Gasquet lamented, “it becomes impossible.”

Consider the streaks that the No. 1-ranked Nadal has amassed.

He has won 12 consecutiv­e matches at Roland Garros; the last loss was against Novak Djokovic in the 2015 quarterfin­als.

He has won 34 completed sets in a row, too, which eclipsed his own previous best of 32 and now stands second in French Open history to Bjorn Borg’s 41 from

1979-81.

He is 82-2 for his career at Roland Garros, 107-2 in best-of-fiveset clay-court matches anywhere.

“It’s no surprise to anyone,” observed Gasquet, who is not exactly a nobody.

Gasquet was seeded 27th in Paris but has been ranked as high as No. 7 and made it to three Grand Slam semifinals.

Nadal now meets 70th-ranked Maximilian Marterer, a 22-yearold German who will be appearing in the fourth round of a major tournament for the first time.

In classic Nadal fashion, he spoke glowingly of his next opponent.

“He’s a player that has a good potential. He’s a player that has a good serve, good forehand. He hits the ball with big topspin. He has power, so he’s a dangerous opponent,” Nadal said. “He’s playing well. He won very easy today, no?”

Other men’s matchups in the top half of the draw with quarterfin­al berths at stake Monday: No. 3 Marin Cilic against No. 18

Fabio Fognini, No. 5 Juan Martin del Potro against No. 9 John Isner, and No. 6 Kevin Anderson against No. 11 Diego Schwartzma­n.

Isner is the last U.S. man left in the field after eliminatin­g the last man from France, Pierre-Hugues Herbert, 7-6 (1), 6-4, 7-6 (4). The last year without a Frenchman in the fourth round at Roland Garros was 2007.

On the other side of the bracket, Sunday’s fourth-round matchups are No. 2 Alexander Zverev against Karen Khachanov, No. 7 Dominic Thiem against No. 19 Kei Nishikori, No. 8 David Goffin against Marco Cecchinato, and 12-time major champion Novak Djokovic against No. 30 Fernando Verdasco.

With about a week to go, Nadal is looking more and more like the absolute favorite. Of the 16 men left, only he and Schwartzma­n have yet to drop a set.

Zverev already has played a pair of five-setters. Djokovic has been shaky at times, too. The only man to beat Nadal on clay this season, Thiem, couldn’t take him on again until the final.

Nadal, who turns 32 on Sunday, employed his usual humility when a reporter raised the popular notion that he’s impossible to beat on clay.

“I don’t know what the others think. All I know is about me. What I know is I go to the court, and I know that I could very well lose. I can win, I can lose. I don’t come here saying, ‘You can’t win against me,’” the Spaniard said. “Of course I have won a lot, and it can maybe influence my opponents. But that’s their thing. It’s their problem.”

 ?? The Associated Press ?? FOURTH ROUND-BOUND: Rafael Nadal returns a ball to Richard Gasquet during their third round match of the French Open Saturday at the Roland Garros stadium in Paris.
The Associated Press FOURTH ROUND-BOUND: Rafael Nadal returns a ball to Richard Gasquet during their third round match of the French Open Saturday at the Roland Garros stadium in Paris.

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