The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Djokovic finds his groove, Gauff marches on

-

NOvAK Djokovic finally hit his stride at the Australian Open yesterday as he sent Argentine Tomas Etcheverry packing 6-3 6-3 7-6 (2) in the third round and marched into the second week of the tournament for the 16th time.

The 10-time champion, who was dragged into dogfights in the first two rounds, gave a master-class in clean and clinical tennis for two sets as he picked apart the 24-year-old Argentine in his 100th match at Melbourne Park.

Etcheverry had seen off 36-year-old Andy Murray in the opening round and 37-yearold Gael Monfils in the second, but found the 36-year-old Djokovic an altogether different prospect.

The 30th seed was unable to land a punch on the 24-time Grand Slam champion, who faced not a single break point, until a flurry in the third set that finally gave the crowd the contest they wanted.

Djokovic, the top seed and reigning champion, clearly did not want to play a fourth set as he continues to struggle with a cold-like ailment and raced through the tiebreak and into the fourth round of a Grand Slam for the 63rd time.

“It was the best performanc­e during this tournament and obviously I’m pleased with how I played throughout the entire match, particular­ly in the first two sets,” said the Serbian, who hit 34 winners over the match.

“He stepped it up in the third set . . . (but) in the tiebreaker I found the right shots, the right serves and closed it out in straight sets.”

The first week of a Grand Slam for top seeds is first of all about getting through against keen lower-ranked players looking to snatch the limelight with an upset.

At the Australian Open, there is also the balancing act of wanting enough time on court to get properly match fit after the off-season break and needing to conserve energy for the business end of the tournament.

Djokovic probably expended more energy than he wanted in the first two rounds but on Friday always looked like he was in control of the match, even when Etcheverry came back at him at the end.

Next up for Djokovic is France’s Adrian Mannarino or American young gun Ben Shelton, who were locked in a five-set contest on Kia Arena.

US Open champion Coco Gauff also signalled her intent in a 6-0, 6-2 romp while 16-year-old Russian Mirra Andreeva kept her dream run going with a battling fightback against France’s Diane Parry.

SABALENKA AND SINNER FIRE WARNING

SHOT

Aryna Sabalenka and Jannik Sinner emphatical­ly stated their Australian Open title credential­s yesterday, surging into the fourth round.

Belarusian defending champion Sabalenka was unstoppabl­e in a crushing 6-0, 6-0 canter over 28th seed Lesia Tsurenko on Rod Laver Arena while Sinner dropped just four games in crushing Sebastian Baez, ranked 29.

Rejuvenate­d former teen prodigy Amanda Anisimova was also a winner on day six at Melbourne Park, ending Paula Badosa’s injury comeback 7-5, 6-4.

Anisimova, returning from eight months on the sidelines due to burnout and mental health issues, faces Sabalenka next and will have to lift her level to stand any chance.

The second seed, who won her maiden Grand Slam crown in Melbourne last year, has dropped just six games over three dominant matches so far.

Wearing vivid red, she was in the zone against Ukraine’s Tsurenko on Rod Laver Arena, racing home in just 52 minutes.

 ?? ?? Coco Gauff after beating Alycia Parks at the Australian Open
Coco Gauff after beating Alycia Parks at the Australian Open

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Zimbabwe