Antelope Valley Press

Is there hope for Djokovic’s next foe?

- By HOWARD FENDRICH and JEROME PUGMIRE

PARIS — At the mere mention of Novak Djokovic’s name, at the mere thought of sharing a court with a 17time Grand Slam champion and the French Open’s No. 1-seeded man, Daniel Elahi Galan broke into a wide smile Thursday.

He used these phrases: “really, really excited” and “really, really happy” and “really, really special.”

Galan is, after all, ranked 153rd and never had won so much as one main-draw match at any major tournament until this week. Making this run to the third round even more improbable: The 24-year-old from Colombia lost in qualifying at Roland Garros and only got into the bracket when other men withdrew from the field.

So, sure, it was a big deal for Galan to beat Tennys Sandgren

6-2, 6-2, 6-3 on Thursday. And, to be sure, a bigger deal to contemplat­e Saturday, when he will face Djokovic, who has dropped a total of 10 games through two matches so far after overwhelmi­ng Ricardas Berankis 6-1, 6-2, 6-2 — and is someone Galan has spotted in the locker room but never spoken to.

It’s the sort of David vs. Goliath matchup that happens often in tennis but is in particular abundance this year in Paris.

Galan is one of nine men ranked outside the top 100 into the third round, equaling the most at any Grand Slam tournament in more than a quarter-century (Wimbledon in 1994); the last time there were as many as nine at Roland Garros was 1985.

There were some unfair-on-paper matchups establishe­d Thursday by the women, too.

Australian Open champion Sofia Kenin, who is seeded fourth, will face 105th-ranked qualifier Irina Bara. Twotime Wimbledon winner Petra

Kvitova next meets 100thranke­d Canadian teen Leylah Fernandez. Jelena Ostapenko, the 2017 French Open champ, plays 87th-ranked Paula Badosa, who arrived in Paris with a 1-5 Grand Slam record.

“I have a very complex game. I can do many things on court,” said Bara, who is making her Grand Slam debut, “and I hope I will bother her with that.”

Maybe all of the success for those who haven’t done it before is due to this being as unusual a French Open as there’s ever been: shifted from May-June to September-October because of the coronaviru­s pandemic; from its position deep in the European clay-court circuit to two weeks after the hardcourt U.S. Open’s conclusion; played amid autumn’s cold temperatur­es and rain, although the sun and blue sky made appearance­s Thursday; just 1,000 spectators allowed on-site each day.

Whatever the case, it’s instructiv­e to remember that occasional­ly, of course, the stone finds its mark.

Which perhaps is why this was Galan’s philosophy as he looked ahead: “Just try to win. Just give it all you have. And that’s it. At the end of the day, it’s just another match.”

So the obvious question: How do you, as the owner of two career Grand Slam match victories, maintain sufficient self-belief and hope ahead of facing Djokovic, whose 292 wins at majors include 70 at the French Open alone?

“Well,” came Galan’s reply, “I was wondering that, to be honest.”

And then he launched into a story about how he was “really, really nervous” before playing former top 10-member David Goffin in the Davis Cup Finals last November.

“He is Goffin, a guy you see on TV all the time. And I just went on the court and I was just expecting him to play unbelievab­le and maybe he will beat me so easy,” Galan recalled. “But at the end of the day, they are, like, human. They also make mistakes. And also they get mad. They are also trying the best they can. And that’s it.”

 ?? Associated Press ?? NO. 1 — Novak Djokovic serves against Ricardas Berankis in the second round match of the French Open at the Roland Garros stadium in Paris, France, on Thursday. Djokovic won 6-1, 6-2, 6-2.
Associated Press NO. 1 — Novak Djokovic serves against Ricardas Berankis in the second round match of the French Open at the Roland Garros stadium in Paris, France, on Thursday. Djokovic won 6-1, 6-2, 6-2.

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