Deccan Chronicle

Halep enters final

In-form Nadal sets up a semifinal clash with Del Potro

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Paris, June 7: Simona Halep emphatical­ly ended the impressive French Open run of 2016 champion Garbine Muguruza with a 6-1, 6-4 victory in the semifinals on Thursday.

Now Halep gets a fourth chance to win her first Grand Slam title.

Halep assured herself of retaining the No. 1 ranking and reached her third final at the Roland Garros. She lost both of the previous ones in three sets, to Maria Sharapova in 2014 and to Jelena Ostapenko in 2017.

The Romanian also came up one victory shy of a major championsh­ip at the Australian Open in January, beaten there by Caroline Wozniacki.

That means Saturday’s final at the French Open will be Halep’s third title match in the past five Grand Slam tournament­s.

Muguruza, a two-time major champion, entered the semifinals having not lost a set in the tournament. She also was coming off a lopsided victory in the quarterfin­als a day earlier, overwhelmi­ng fivetime major champion Maria Sharapova 6-2, 6-1.

But it took Muguruza quite a while to get going against Halep, who managed to keep sending ball after ball back over the net.

In two rain-interrupte­d men’s quarterfin­als that were suspended on Wednesday evening, No. 1 Rafael Nadal completed a 4-6, 6-3, 6-2, 6-2 comeback over 11th-seeded Diego Schwartzma­n, and No. 5 Juan Martin del Potro defeated No. 3 Marin Cilic 7-6 (5), 5-7, 63, 7-5.

Nadal reached his 11th French Open semifinal as he bids for a recordexte­nding 11th title at the clay-court major. Del Potro got back to the semifinals in Paris for the first time since 2009.

They will play each other on Friday, when the other men’s semifinal is No. 7 Dominic Thiem of Austria against 72nd-ranked Marco Cecchinato of Italy.

“It’s tough to speak now,” said an emotional Del Potro.

“I’ve been a long time without feeling good with my body. I had surgery three times on my wrist and I was close to quitting this sport. I don’t have words to explain what this means to me and my team,” he added.

The fifth seed has now beaten Cilic eight times in a row.

Meanwhile, Nadal said “Pressure is good. You are able to control that. That pressure, that adrenaline, can be in a positive way.”

The 16-time Grand Slam champion was pushed for three hours and 42 minutes by 11th seed Schwartzma­n.

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