The Guardian (USA)

Novak Djokovic makes short work of Khachanov to move into quarter-finals

- Kevin Mitchell

Novak Djokovic surges on, Alexander Zverev goes home to heal his ailing body and the most extraordin­ary French Open in living memory enters the second week burdened with fresh concerns about coronaviru­s.

When Zverev departed Roland Garros, sweating from an undiagnose­d fever he had failed to report before losing to Jannik Sinner of Italy in the fourth round, some of those still involved in the tournament were left to wonder about their own health. They are still wondering.

Fédération Française de Tennis (FFT) on Monday declined to add to its statement of the previous evening that Zverev was “up to date” on his Covid tests, all negative, even though the most recent was on 29 September. The federation said he did not consult a tournament doctor before the match, despite feeling unwell, and did not respond to a reminder that he was due another test that day.

On Monday night Zverev, who refused to address the issue in his postmatch conference , told German Eurosport’s Matchball Becker programme: “I received the result today. It’s negative. I don’t have Covid. I’ve been better. I have a cold.” He also claimed – contrary to tournament protocols – he was not obliged to “indicate whether one was ill or not”. Zverev claimed the tournament doctor gave him “cold medicine” after he admitted on Friday he was ill because he did not want to risk accidental­ly taking a banned substance. “The tournament knew [I was ill],” he alleged.

So, Zverev could be at home in Monte Carlo recovering from a virus that last month prevented his mother and father from attending his final of the US Open, or he could be up and about partying within days – as he did after Djokovic’s Covid-wrecked Balkan exhibition tour in June. His agent, Team 8, which also acts for Roger Federer, did not respond to inquiries.

Under the roof of Court Philippe Chatrier, meanwhile, as rain splashed the outside courts on day nine, Djokovic strengthen­ed his title claims by beating the Russian Karen Khachanov 6-4, 6-3, 6-3 to join Stefanos Tsitsipas and Andrey Rublev in the quarter-finals from the top half of the draw.

Khachanov, the No 15 seed, reminded Djokovic of the high-grade tennis he brought to his only win over him in four attempts, in the Paris Masters final two years ago, but the world No 1, unbeaten in 35 completed matches this year, accelerate­d through the gears to finish the job in two hours and 23 minutes.

“It was pretty competitiv­e, very equal,” Djokovic said, adding that his continued use of the drop shot was designed “to change the pace a lot against Karen, who is a powerful player. I tried to move him from the back of the court. I’m just very happy to have reached this stage of the tournament without having lost a set. Now I’m in the quarter-finals, and on we go. Vamos.”

Tim Henman, on Eurosport, spotted that Djokovic inadverten­tly struck another line official – this time in play while returning serve – and said: “It was a great serve out wide from Khachanov and the ball skidded off the line. Novak is at full stretch and hits the line judge. Obviously totally different circumstan­ces [to New York, where he was disqualifi­ed last month]. This was in play but I’m sure Novak had his heart in his mouth.”

Djokovic said later: “It was very awkward deja vu. I hope he is all right. I will try to see him.”

Zverev’s comments came on a day when Paris was placed on maximum alert over the virus, with all bars closed for a fortnight and security tightened at hotels and restaurant­s.

Sinner, who plays Rafael Nadal in the quarter-finals on Tuesday, said: “I don’t think I will have fever next days – or I hope [not]. Maybe I have. I mean, you never know about that.”

Rublev said after beating the unseeded Hungarian Marton Fucsovics 6-7, 7-5, 6-4, 7-6 on Court Suzanne Lenglen before the rain to book a quarterfin­al against Tsitsipas, that he tested negative on Sunday – five days after Zverev’s last. “I did three or four tests in total.”

It has also emerged that the Pullman Paris Tour Eiffel, one of two hotels housing players and their teams, is far from biosecure. According to the New York Times, almost half of the 430 rooms were kept for guests, and Sam Querrey claimed tourists staying in the room next to Zverev returned each night with souvenirs from the nearby Eiffel Tower. “The hotel is not really a bubble,” the American said.

Back on court, before Tsitsipas and Djokovic, Petra Kvitova was the first victor of the day on Philippe Chatrier, easing into her second Roland Garros quarter-final when she defeated Zhang Shuai of China 6-2, 6-4. She will face Germany’s world No 66, Laura Siegemund, who beat Paula Badosa 7-5, 6-2.

Kvitova, who made her comeback on the same court in 2017 six months after a knife attack, said: “I got a bit emotional last two points of my match. My memories, happy memories, when I made my comeback here 2017, when I step on the Philippe Chatrier, I couldn’t really imagine me to be in the quarterfin­al of this slam. It’s been a long ride, definitely.”

 ?? Photograph: Christophe Ena/AP ?? Novak Djokovic returns to Russia’s Karen Khachanov in the world No 1’s fourth-round win at Roland Garros.
Photograph: Christophe Ena/AP Novak Djokovic returns to Russia’s Karen Khachanov in the world No 1’s fourth-round win at Roland Garros.
 ?? Photograph: Clive Brunskill/Getty Images ?? Petra Kvitova has reached the French Open quarter-finals for the first time in eight years.
Photograph: Clive Brunskill/Getty Images Petra Kvitova has reached the French Open quarter-finals for the first time in eight years.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States