Albuquerque Journal

Aches, pains and all, Djokovic rallies and advances to semifinals

He wins in rematch of incident at U.S. Open

- BY HOWARD FENDRICH AND JOHN LEICESTER

PARIS — The first obvious sign of trouble for Novak Djokovic came when he stepped out into Court Philippe Chatrier with a rather large square of beige athletic tape on the back of his neck.

The next indication came on the very first point of his French Open quarterfin­al against Pablo Carreño Busta, when Djokovic let a ball toss drop and abandoned his serve midmotion.

Soon enough, Djokovic was flexing and stretching his left arm or hitting it with his racket. Off to a slow start Wednesday night, Djokovic received massages from a trainer, righted himself and beat Carreño Busta 4-6, 6-2, 6-3, 6-4 to reach the semifinals at Roland Garros for the 10th time.

“I definitely didn’t feel great coming into the court today. A few things happened in the warmup,” the No. 1-ranked Djokovic said, without going into specifics.

“I had some neck issues and some shoulder issues. I’ll just say that. I mean, I don’t want to get really too much into it. Obviously I’m still in the tournament, so I don’t want to reveal too much. I’m feeling OK,” said Djokovic, who will face No. 5 Stefanos Tsitsipas in Friday’s semifinals. “As the match progressed, I warmed up my body, and the pain kind of faded away. It allowed me to play better and better and feel better.”

He is right-handed, but the left side is important, too. He uses it for his two-fisted backhand and to throw the ball in the air on serves. Whatever impediment there was to his play, whatever the pain level might have been, the issue was, at the very least, a distractio­n.

This was a rematch from the U.S. Open last month, when Djokovic was defaulted for inadverten­tly hitting a line judge in the throat with a ball he smacked in anger. That went into the books as a loss and remains the only blemish on Djokovic’s 36-1 record in 2020.

“I’m over it,” he said. “I’m not thinking about it at all. I mean, zero percent.”

Djokovic certainly does seem to have moved past that episode, winning all 10 matches he’s played since.

He hadn’t even ceded a set at Roland Garros until Wednesday. Now he’ll get a day to recuperate as he seeks a second title in Paris and 18th Grand Slam trophy.

No. 2 Rafael Nadal faces No. 12 Diego Schwartzma­n in the other semifinal Friday. Nadal eyes a 13th championsh­ip at the French Open, which would give him 20 majors overall, equaling Roger Federer’s record for men; Schwartzma­n never has played in a Slam semifinal.

In the women’s semifinals Thursday, it’ll be Sofia Kenin vs. Petra Kvitova, and Iga Swiatek vs. Nadia Podoroska.

Tsitsipas reached his first French Open semifinal with a 7-5, 6-2, 6-3 victory over 13th-seeded Andrey Rublev, taking control after trailing in the first set with a run of five consecutiv­e games, and 11 of 13.

At the U.S. Open, Tsitsipas failed to convert a half-dozen match points in a thirdround loss. Then, against Rublev in the final of the clay-court Hamburg Open on Sept. 27 — Day 1 of the French Open — Tsitsipas served for the victory but wound up absorbing another dishearten­ing defeat. Two days later, in Paris, Tsitsipas lost the initial two sets of his first-round match against 109th-ranked Jaume Munar. But Tsitsipas hasn’t lost a set since. “I’m chasing something spectacula­r,” the 22-year-old from Greece said.

He’ll need to get past Djokovic to continue the pursuit.

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