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View Schedule: Federer & Nadal Look For R4 Spots At Roland Garros

  • Posted: May 30, 2019

View Schedule: Federer & Nadal Look For R4 Spots At Roland Garros

Tsitsipas, Wawrinka in action on Friday

Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal look to continue their impressive Roland Garros runs in third-round action on Friday. Sixth seed Stefanos Tsitsipas seeks his 32nd tour-level win of the season and 2015 champion Stan Wawrinka faces Grigor Dimitrov in a blockbuster clash.

Third seed Federer takes on #NextGenATP Norwegian Casper Ruud, who is competing in the third round of a Grand Slam for the first time. Casper’s father, Christian Ruud, is a former Top 40 player who reached the third round here in 1995 and 1999. The Swiss star has yet to drop a set this tournament and holds a 67-16 record at the second major of the year. Ruud reached his first ATP Tour final this April in Houston (l. to Garin).

Eleven-time champion and second seed Nadal battles No. 27 seed David Goffin of Belgium. Nadal leads their FedEx ATP Head2Head rivalry 3-1 and hasn’t lost a set in their three meetings on clay. The Spaniard has lost just 13 games in his first two rounds this fortnight and is now on a seven-match winning streak on clay. Goffin also dropped 13 games in reaching the third round and is displaying the tennis that brought him to a career-high No. 7 in the ATP Rankings.

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Tsitsipas returns to Philippe-Chatrier to face Filip Krajinovic. The Serbian had never won a match on the red clay of Paris prior to this year. Tsitsipas’ results this European clay swing include a stunning win over Nadal en route to a runner-up finish at the Mutua Madrid Open (l. to Djokovic), semi-final showing at the Internazionali BNL d’Italia and his third tour-level title at the Millennium Estoril Open (d. Cuevas).

Wawrinka and Dimitrov are even in their FedEx ATP Head2Head rivalry at 4-4, but the Swiss won their past two meetings in first-round clashes last year at Wimbledon and the US Open. Dimitrov defeated Marin Cilic in five sets on Wednesday for his first Top 15 win since April 2018. Wawrinka seeks his first fourth-round appearance at a major since finishing runner-up here in 2017 (l. to Nadal).

Other notable third-round matches on Friday include seventh seed Kei Nishikori of Japan taking on No. 31 seed Laslo Djere of Serbia and French wild card Nicolas Mahut looking to continue his run against Argentine Leonardo Mayer.

More On #RG19

* The Moment Nadal’s Practice Routine Changed Forever
* Federer Closes On ‘Alphabet’ Grand Slam
* Federer on Ruud: ‘I Know More About His Dad’

ORDER OF PLAY – FRIDAY, 31 MAY 2019

Court Philippe-Chatrier start 11:00
Two WTA matches
[2] Rafael Nadal vs David Goffin
[6] Stefanos Tsitsipas vs Filip Krajinovic

Court Suzanne Lenglen start 11:00
WTA match
Martin Klizan vs [22] Lucas Pouille – To Finish 76(4) 26 63 31
[3] Roger Federer vs Casper Ruud
WTA match
[24] Stan Wawrinka vs Grigor Dimitrov

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Court Simonne-Mathieu start 11:00
WTA match
Benoit Paire vs Pablo Carreno Busta
Nicolas Mahut vs Leonardo Mayer
WTA match

Court No. 1 start 11:00
Jeremy Chardy / Fabrice Martin vs Matwe Middelkoop / Tim Puetz
[31] Laslo Djere vs [7] Kei Nishikori
[WC] Gregoire Barrere / Quentin Halys vs Alex de Minaur / David Vega Hernandez

Court No. 14 start 11:00
Rajeev Ram / Joe Salisbury vs Enzo Couacaud / Tristan Lamasine
WTA match
[WC] Corentin Moutet vs Juan Ignacio Londero

Court No. 7 start 11:00
[8] Henri Kontinen / John Peers vs Marcelo Demoliner / Divij Sharan
WTA match – to finish
Guido Pella / Diego Schwartzman vs Matteo Berrettini / Lorenzo Sonego
[4] Oliver Marach / Mate Pavic vs Elliot Benchetrit / Geoffrey Blancaneaux
Dominic Inglot / Martin Klizan vs Leander Paes / Benoit Paire

Court No. 6 start 11:00
Dusan Lajovic / Janko Tipsarevic vs Denys Molchanov / Igor Zelenay
WTA match
[WC] Benjamin Bonzi / Antoine Hoang vs Rohan Bopanna / Marius Copil
Federico Delbonis / Guillermo Duran vs Miomir Kecmanovic / Casper Ruud

Court No. 9 start 11:00
Two WTA matches
Ricardas Berankis / Yoshihito Nishioka vs [10] Jean-Julien Rojer / Horia Tecau

Court No. 12 start 11:00
Pablo Cuevas / Feliciano Lopez vs Mikhail Kukushkin / Joran Vliegen

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5 Things To Know About Ambidextrious Frenchman Hoang

  • Posted: May 30, 2019

5 Things To Know About Ambidextrious Frenchman Hoang

23-year-old will face Gael Monfils next at Roland Garros

Antoine Hoang wants this week to continue for the rest of his life. The 23-year-old Frenchman is into the third round at Roland Garros, and will next meet one of the flag bearers of French men’s tennis for the past decade.

Here are five things to know about the 23-year-old Hoang:

1. He had one tour-level win before this week.
Hoang won his first ATP Challenger Tour title last October in Eckental and in February, he celebrated his maiden tour-level win at the Open Sud de France in Montpellier.

Hoang qualified for the ATP 250 event and beat Belgian Steve Darcis before losing to countryman Jeremy Chardy. The French wild card has doubled his career win total this week by making the third round in Paris.

I could not explain. Good things happen to me this time,” Hoang said. “I’m a bit lucky sometimes. Today Fernando served for the third set. He did 40/0 on his game, and then the things turned to my side. I don’t know. I can’t explain everything. But I have nothing to lose here, so I try to enjoy every moment, to push every time.”

2. He has a university degree.
Hoang is all in on his tennis career, but he has a backup plan if things don’t go exactly to plan. He has a university degree in sports.

My parents pushed me to study so that I could have a Plan B. I don’t know if it’s a good idea. But when one has a project, we should actually push it as far as possible at 20, 21, 22,” Hoang said.

Now I’m giving myself 100 per cent to this project. I’m not thinking about teaching with my sports degree. Maybe I’m arriving on the Tour later than others, but I still have a lot of beautiful years ahead of me. I can evolve and progress. I do not regret what I have done so far.”

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3. He is ambidextrious.
The way Hoang explains it, shoulder problems led him to decide to train with his left arm.
I made quite a lot of progress,” he said.

But once he fully recovered from his injury and wanted to again play his best, he switched back to using his right hand.

I started playing tennis when I was a kid with my right hand, so I was playing forehand and backhand normally, but I already had a good backhand,” Hoang said. “Then when I got hurt, as I said, I learned to play with my left hand, doing the forehand and maybe the left-handed backhand.”

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4. He works with a mental coach.
Perhaps Hoang has had the best week of his life because, mentally, what he needs to do on the court is clearer than ever. He worked with a mental coach before Roland Garros.

The aim was to stay focused on my objectives, to encourage myself from the beginning to the end, even if there are mistakes, even if the match is not perfect,” Hoang said.

I’ve been working on this on a daily basis, how to keep a positive mindset. I like to have attacking shots, so sometimes I make mistakes and it’s hard to follow this mentally because you may wonder, ‘Why are you making such mistakes?’ And this is actually what I think about myself, too. I try to be stable and composed, mentally speaking.”

The self-proclaimed introvert has stayed mentally composed despite rarely encouraging himself out loud. Hoang said showing emotions on court isn’t easy for him, but he’s working on it.

“The mental fight is important and sharing emotions with the crowd is important. I’m making efforts to do so. I’m trying to encourage myself when I tend not to. It’s very important,” he said.

Read More: Mahut Describes His Best Victory In Paris

5. He next plays the face of men’s tennis in France.
Hoang will want to play as fearless as possible when he meets Gael Monfils, surely at Court Philippe Chatrier, the main show court, or Court Suzanne Lenglen, the second biggest court at Roland Garros.

Monfils made the third round for the 11th time by dismissing countryman Adrian Mannarino 6-3, 6-4, 6-4. The 32-year-old has yet to drop a set in Paris.

I know Gael from watching him on TV. I really enjoyed watching him, whether in Davis Cup or in other international tournaments,” Hoang said. “He’s a very nice person, so I guess the atmosphere of the match will be good. We’re not going to fight each other in that way. But the public will be behind both of us and will support a good game, so I believe we will both get support from the public.”

About playing on a bigger court, Hoang said, “All these things I’m not used to going through. It’s a first for me, and I feel that these things I wanted to go through, I didn’t want to be afraid.”

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Halep overcomes illness to join Williams in third round, while Anisimova, 17, causes upset

  • Posted: May 30, 2019
2019 French Open
Venue: Roland Garros, Paris Dates: 26 May-9 June
Coverage: Live text and radio commentary on selected matches on the BBC Sport website and app.

Defending champion Simona Halep made it through to the French Open third round, where she joined three-time winner Serena Williams.

World number three Halep overcame illness to beat Poland’s Magda Linette 6-4 5-7 6-3 in two hours 11 minutes.

“I didn’t feel that great. Tomorrow I will sleep all day because I am a bit sick,” said Halep.

Earlier, 23-time Grand Slam champion Williams beat Japanese qualifier Kurumi Nara 6-3 6-2.

  • It’s impossible to predict a French Open winner – Svitolina column
  • Osaka survives scare to beat Azarenka

Halep recovers from missed match points to win

Halep showed her intentions from the off, breaking her Polish opponent’s serve in the very first game with a stunning forehand winner.

Linette, 27, soon broke back to level the set at 2-2, before immediately losing on her own serve as Halep went on to hold for a 4-2 lead.

The next two games went against serve before Linette held and Halep secured the opening set in 49 minutes.

In the second set, Halep broke Linette’s second service game and looked set to serve out the match when she found herself 40-30 ahead at 5-4 up.

But stunning play from Linette, particularly on the forehand, frustrated Halep as the world number 87 defied her ranking to break back before winning the set.

Halep controlled the deciding set from the start, though, breaking Linette’s serve on three occasions as she went 5-1 up.

But unforced errors started to creep into her game as Linette mounted a comeback – Halep eventually wrapping up the set and match on a break.

She will next play Aleksandra Krunic or Lesia Tsurenko, whose match was suspended at 6-6 in the third set as darkness fell.

Meanwhile, there will be no French woman in the Roland Garros third round for the first time since 1986 after Caroline Garcia was knocked out.

Garcia, seeded 24th, was beaten by Russian qualifier Anna Blinkova 1-6 6-4 6-4.

  • Djokovic wins as top men’s seeds march on
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‘It’s going to get better’ – Williams happy after Nara win

Williams, 37, needed just one hour seven minutes to prevail over Japan’s Nara. The first set remained on serve for the first seven games, with world number 238 Nara proving a decent match for her opponent in the opening exchanges.

But Williams eventually broke 27-year-old Nara’s serve to move 5-3 ahead before serving out the set.

She dominated the second set, breaking Nara’s serve twice before serving out the match with an ace, having not dropped a point in the final game.

“I’m very serious when I play, but I’m happy,” said Williams.

“I have had a tough year since I twisted my ankle in Australia.

“It’s just been really tough after that. So everything definitely feels a little bit harder than normal, but at the same time, I know that it’s going to get better.”

On facing fellow American Sofia Kenin next, Williams said: “I know her game really well. She had a really great run in Australia, and I have been watching her.

“I think it will be a good match. She has a lot to bring to the table.”

‘I’ll remember it forever’ – Williams inspires Anisimova, 17

Elsewhere, fellow American Amanda Anisimova reached the third round after beating 11th seed Aryna Sabalenka 6-4 6-2.

She will next play Romania’s Irina-Camelia Begu, who defeated Karolina Muchova of the Czech Republic 1-6 6-3 6-4.

At 17, Anisimova is the youngest American to reach the third round at Roland Garros since Williams in 1999.

“She’s done so much for the sport,” world number 51 Anisimova said of Williams.

“She’s a huge inspiration to me. I really look up to her. That’s just great to be achieving stuff similar to her.

“Actually when I had a tough loss at the Miami Open – it was a really long match and I was super upset in the locker room – Serena actually came up to me and we shared a little bit of a chat.

“That was really nice of her, and I’ll remember it forever.”

Williams said: “I just needed to do that, and I know she’s super young. I really love all the new young players.

“It’s just so exciting. I feel like tennis has done so much for me, and to see a new generation come through is great.”

Meanwhile, Poland’s junior Wimbledon champion Iga Swiatek, also 17,knocked out 16th seed Wang Qiang of China 6-3 6-0 in under an hour.

Swiatek will play Puerto Rico’s Monica Puig after the Olympic champion beat Russian 21st seed Daria Kasatkina 6-3 6-1.

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Together Again, Bryans Beat Skupskis At Roland Garros

  • Posted: May 30, 2019

Together Again, Bryans Beat Skupskis At Roland Garros

Bryans looking to win third Roland Garros title

Playing together, the Bryan brothers have a perfect record in first-round action at Roland Garros – “20 for 20,” quipped Bob Bryan following their win Tuesday. But last year in Paris, Mike Bryan bowed out in his opening match when he teamed up with fellow American Sam Querrey in a loss to Ken Skupski and Neal Skupski.

Back alongside his brother this year, Mike avenged that defeat. The seventh-seeded Bryans beat the Skupskis 7-5, 7-6(6) on Thursday to advance to the third round at the clay-court major. They also won the clash of brothers earlier this year in the final of the Delray Beach Open by VITACOST.com, the Americans’ first title since Bob’s return from hip surgery.

Top seeds Lukasz Kubot and Marcelo Melo came from behind to defeat Marcus Daniell and Wesley Koolhof 4-6, 6-2, 6-4, matching their team’s best run at Roland Garros, a Round of 16 finish last year  (l. to Bopanna/Roger-Vasselin). Also in second-round action, Robin Haase and Frederik Nielsen rallied for a 2-6, 6-2, 6-3 win over Brits Daniel Evans and Cameron Norrie.

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Frenchman Nicolas Mahut, who won the title last year with Pierre-Hugues Herbert, joined forces with Austrian Jurgen Melzer for a 6-2, 6-2 win over Italians Marco Cecchinato and Andreas Seppi in the first round. Mahut completed the career Grand Slam earlier this year when he and Herbert claimed the Australian Open title. 

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Djokovic wins in straight sets as top 10 men's seeds march on

  • Posted: May 30, 2019
2019 French Open
Venue: Roland Garros, Paris Dates: 26 May-9 June
Coverage: Live text and radio commentary on selected matches on the BBC Sport website and app.

World number one Novak Djokovic claimed a routine win over ‘lucky loser’ Henri Laaksonen to move into the third round of the French Open at Roland Garros.

Djokovic who won the 2016 competition, secured a 6-1 6-4 6-3 victory on Court Suzanne Lenglen in Paris.

He is aiming for his second Grand Slam title of 2019 after winning the Australian Open in January.

All of the top 10 seeded players in the men’s singles are into the third round after wins for six of them on Thursday.

Edmund retires from second-round match

  • Serena Williams reaches third round by beating Nara
  • Top seed Osaka survives scare to beat Azarenka
  • Svitolina: Facing Muguruza, practising with Gael & romantic dinners

Laaksonen was beaten by Sweden’s Mikael Ymer in the third round of qualifying but took his place in the main draw after benefiting from withdrawals.

The Swiss, ranked 104th in the world, beat Spanish qualifier Pedro Martinez in the opening round to set up a first meeting with 15-time Grand Slam winner Djokovic.

The first set lasted only 23 minutes, but Laaksonen provided more resistance in the second, breaking Djokovic’s serve in the sixth game.

However, Djokovic twice broke Laaksonen’s serve in consecutive service games to take a two-set lead.

Djokovic, 32, will play unseeded Italian Salvatore Caruso, who knocked out France’s 26th seed Gilles Simon.

Thiem and Zverev safely through

Fourth seed Dominic Thiem, the runner-up last year, moved into round three with a 6-3 6-7 (6-8) 6-3 7-5 win over Kazakhstan’s Alexander Bublik.

Bublik three times opted to play underarm serves to disrupt Thiem’s rhythm, but could not beat the Austrian, who faces Uruguayan Pablo Cuevas after Britain’s Kyle Edmund pulled out with injury in the third set.

Asked about Bublik’s underarm serves, Thiem said: “It’s a good choice against players like us who are so far behind the baseline.

“For me it was tough. I had difficulties finding the right position. I didn’t practise [for] it but I just expect it from time to time. He won two out of three. Sometimes it’s quite a good tactic.”

‘We’ve seen so many underarm serves’ – analysis

Stuart Fraser, Times tennis correspondent, on BBC Radio 5 Live Sports Extra

Bublik has played underarm serves, taking some inspiration from Nick Kyrgios earlier this year. Someone made the point that they could be the first underarm serves on Chatrier since Martina Hingis 20 years ago?

This year is also the 30th anniversary of Michael Chang’s famous underarm against Ivan Lendl.

Someone like Rafael Nadal stands so far back, so there is an opportunity here and there if you get enough side-spin on it to play it. We’ve seen it so much this year.

  • Live scores, schedule and results
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Round-up

German fifth seed Alexander Zverev beat Mikael Ymer 6-1 6-3 7-6 (7-3) to set up a meeting with 30th seed Dusan Lajovic of Serbia, who overcame French qualifier Elliot Benchetrit 6-3 6-4 6-4.

Argentine eighth seed Juan Martin del Potro survived a scare before beating Japan’s Yoshihito Nishioka 5-7 6-4 6-2 6-7 (5-7) 6-2.

There were also wins for ninth seed Fabio Fognini and 10th seed Karen Khachanov, who defeated Federico Delbonis and Gregoire Barrere respectively.

Fourteenth seed Gael Monfils, a French Open semi-finalist 11 years ago, knocked out fellow Frenchman Adrian Mannarino 6-3 6-4 6-4.

Monfils reached the third round at Roland Garros for an 11th time, equalling the French record held by Mary Pierce and Yannick Noah.

Diego Schwartzman, the 17th seed, lost 4-6 6-3 6-4 7-5 to fellow Argentine Leonardo Mayer.

French wildcard Antoine Hoang won 6-4 3-6 7-6 (7-5) 7-5 against Spanish 23rd seed Fernando Verdasco, who beat Britain’s Dan Evans in the first round.

Croat Ivo Karlovic, 40, who on Tuesday became the oldest player to win a match at Roland-Garros for 46 years, lost 6-3 6-4 6-7 (2-7) 6-3 to Australian Jordan Thompson.

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Elina Svitolina column: It's impossible to predict a French Open winner

  • Posted: May 30, 2019

World number nine Elina Svitolina, who has won 13 singles titles on the WTA Tour, will be writing columns for the BBC Sport website during the French Open, which runs from 26 May to 9 June.

The 24-year-old Ukrainian, who was at a career-high ranking of three last year, plays 2016 champion Garbine Muguruza in a blockbuster of a third-round match on Friday.

The two-time Roland Garros quarter-finalist talks about the strength of the women’s singles, facing Spanish 19th seed Muguruza and how practising with boyfriend – French world number 17 – Gael Monfils is improving her game.

There are many, many good players in a Grand Slam and I think these days the women’s game is at its highest level.

Players like Angelique Kerber and Caroline Wozniacki have already gone out, while Serena Williams, Naomi Osaka and Simona Halep didn’t have it easy.

That shows the depth of the women’s game and how strong the draw is.

It doesn’t matter if you are playing the person ranked 80th in the world or 20th – they are equally dangerous.

It’s impossible to predict how many players could possibly win Roland Garros because there are so many contenders.

But I don’t think too much about what is happening in the other parts of the draw.

And when a big name goes out there is not much talk in the locker room about it.

I only think about my part and mostly just the next opponent. If you look too far it can make you a little distracted and unfocused. What comes, comes.

  • Beating Venus Williams & facing a childhood friend
  • Facing a legend, injury battles & going out with Gael

‘I need to react quickly to Muguruza’

After beating Venus Williams in the first round I have another tough challenge against Garbine Muguruza – someone who has won the Roland Garros title recently.

I’m not sure how that affects her – whether that brings more pressure on her or helps because she knows she can win here.

I don’t know because I have never been in this situation where I have won a Grand Slam and returned as the champion!

I imagine there are plusses and minuses but I try not to think about her situation – I try to think about myself.

Otherwise you have too many thoughts and it is useless to waste energy.

I have a good record against Garbine and have won six of our seven previous matches.

We have only played once on clay – in the 2017 Italian Open semi-finals – and she retired with a neck injury when I was leading 4-1.

But I don’t expect her to play any different to any other surface.

Garbine plays very early, she tries to dictate the point. So it is important for me to react really quickly and expect that.

‘Practising with Gael is fun and improves me’

I reached the third round in an unexpected way because my opponent Kateryna Kozlova – who I have known since we were children in Ukraine – had to withdraw from our match with illness.

An opponent pulling out doesn’t really affect me mentally. It comes, you have to react and adjust yourself.

So I had three hits on Wednesday instead.

Obviously I practised for my match and then when the match was cancelled I practised with Gael.

We were doing a doubles drill from the baseline where I’m attacking the ball and he’s defending – he’s obviously an amazing defender – so it was tough for me to make a winner.

He is too fit and too quick and too strong! So that’s why for me it is good.

I’m approaching and doing volleys and he is always there. It is good practice for both of us and it’s great fun.

Thankfully the loser doesn’t have to pay for dinner – but whoever loses gets a hard shot hit at their body!

After that practice I then played a set with my hitting partner later on Wednesday. I played my last match on Sunday so I have to be ready and keep my head focused for the next one.

Playing a set obviously isn’t the same as playing in the tournament match but that does help keep me a little in ‘match mode’.

In a Grand Slam you have to be fresh and ready and straight into the first point because you have to compete at the highest level straight away.

‘Relaxing and romantic dinners are important too’

Not playing because an opponent has pulled out means you definitely have time to be able to mentally relax a little as well.

We went for dinner with friends in the afternoon and then it was a quiet night because Gael played on Thursday.

We watch movies a lot but it is tough here in Paris to go shopping or whatever because Gael, as one of France’s biggest tennis stars, is obviously very famous here.

People recognise him and it is very difficult to have a calm walk through the Champs-Elysees, for example.

That means we don’t go out much, but on Wednesday we did go to our favourite restaurant near the Champs-Elysees – it is actually where we met!

We love that place. So it is a special place and brings back good memories.

Nowadays I would say I’m more relaxed when I’m on the practice court but still, of course, I’m very focused when I have to step on the tennis court.

It is important to do what makes you feel good on and off the court.

‘Playing on Chatrier is always special’

I wouldn’t say I have a favourite court in the world but I do love the show courts at Roland Garros – they are very special to me.

I always dreamed of playing at Roland Garros because I think it was the only one tournament they would show in Ukraine!

Whether I’m playing Chatrier, Lenglen or Simonne-Mathieu, it doesn’t matter to me – I really enjoy playing in all of them.

I thrive on playing on bigger courts, it gives you extra motivation. All the support you get on these courts helps you get through the tough moments and go again and again.

I’ve been told there have been a lot of empty seats on Chatrier at times – but I didn’t notice that when Gael played there on Tuesday.

It was not quite full, but it was a good crowd and he said afterwards the energy was amazing. It really fired him up.

I think the crowd size depends on the weather as well and also in the early afternoon, because in France lunch is almost like a holy thing!

If a stadium isn’t very full I don’t think about it too much, if it is a Grand Slam or a big tournament you have to push yourself.

Of course it is much better to play when the crowd is there, but playing on Chatrier is always special.

Elina Svitolina was speaking to BBC Sport’s Jonathan Jurejko at Roland Garros.

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Zverev Wins In Straight Sets For Only Second Time At Roland Garros

  • Posted: May 30, 2019

Zverev Wins In Straight Sets For Only Second Time At Roland Garros

German to face Monte-Carlo finalist Lajovic in third round

For only the second time in 11 main draw matches at Roland Garros, Alexander Zverev recorded a straight sets triumph on Wednesday.

The fifth-seeded German will be relieved to have weathered a late comeback by Mikael Ymer of Sweden in a 6-1, 6-3, 7-6(3) victory in just under two hours for a place in the third round for a third straight year.

Last year, Zverev came through three five-set clashes en route to his first Grand Slam championship quarter-final (l. to Thiem) and then beat Australia’s John Millman 7-6(4), 6-3, 2-6, 6-7(5), 6-3 in the 2019 first round on Tuesday. Read More & Watch Highlights

The 22-year-old struck 36 winners — including 12 aces — lost just 10 of his first-service points and won 20 of 27 points at the net. He was in complete control through to 5-3 in the third set against Ymer, was making his major championship debut this week, before the World No. 148 won three straight games. Zverev regrouped to win eight of the next 10 points to a 4/0 advantage in the tie-break.

Zverev will now face Serbian No. 30 seed Dusan Lajovic, who the German beat 2-6, 7-5, 4-6, 6-1, 6-2 in the 2018 Roland Garros second round. Lajovic, who has gone 3-4 since advancing to the Rolex Monte-Carlo Masters final (l. to Fognini) on 21 April, knocked out French qualifier Elliot Benchetrit 6-3, 6-3, 6-4 in one hour and 38 minutes.

Zverev is riding a six-match winning streak, which includes saving two match points against Nicolas Jarry in the Banque Eric Sturdza Geneva Open final on Saturday for his 11th ATP Tour title.

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Top seed Osaka survives scare to beat Azarenka

  • Posted: May 30, 2019
2019 French Open
Venue: Roland Garros, Paris Dates: 26 May-9 June
Coverage: Live text and radio commentary on selected matches on the BBC Sport website and app.

World number one Naomi Osaka survived another early scare to reach the third round of the French Open.

Japan’s Osaka, 21, overcame a poor start to beat two-time Grand Slam champion Victoria Azarenka 4-6 7-5 6-3.

Osaka is chasing her third successive Grand Slam title having won the 2018 US Open and the Australian Open earlier this year.

She will play the Czech Republic’s Katerina Siniakova in the next round after she beat Greece’s Maria Sakkari.

“I was lucky enough to play her (Azarenka) twice before this and I knew she was playing really well,” said Osaka.

“It was unfortunate that this was a second-round match but I am happy I won.”

Asked if she is as calm on the inside as she looks on court, she added: “No. I choked on this side (at 5-1) and almost choked on the other side (at 5-3). I am very emotional.”

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  • Knee injury forces Edmund to quit
  • Live scores, schedule and results

Osaka struggled in the early stages against world number 43 Azarenka, of Belarus, just as she did in the first round against Anna Karolina Schmiedlova when she failed to register a game.

She hit 15 unforced errors in the opening set on Lenglen court as Azarenka, 29, dominated to go 5-1 up.

From there, Osaka – who reached the third round at Roland Garros 12 months ago – started to find her rhythm, breaking Azarenka’s serve to move within one game of her opponent but Azarenka coolly served out the first set.

The second set proved a much closer affair, taking until the fifth game for a serve to be broken as Azarenka went 3-2 up. That came after Osaka had scuppered three break points in the fourth game.

Azarenka went on to go 4-2 up but Osaka was able to claw the set back, taking it 7-5 on her fourth set point.

Former world number one Azarenka took an 11-minute break before the deciding set commenced, but it proved little help as Osaka raced into a 5-1 lead, her performance a far cry from that of the first set.

Azarenka mounted her own comeback, winning the next two games, but Osaka was able to capitalise on her second match point to seal victory.

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Kyle Edmund retires from French Open second-round match against Pablo Cuevas

  • Posted: May 30, 2019

Kyle Edmund is out of the French Open after retiring during his second-round match against Uruguayan Pablo Cuevas.

The British number one, 24, trailed 7-6 (7-3) 6-3 2-1 when he called for the trainer.

It was not clear what the problem was for the 28th seed but, after a lengthy chat, Edmund shook his head and then the hand of Cuevas.

Edmund’s exit means Johanna Konta is the only Briton left in the singles at Roland Garros.

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Edmund was bidding to reach the last 32 of the French Open for the third successive year, having ended a five-match losing streak on clay this year with a gutsy five-set win over France’s Jeremy Chardy in the opening round.

But the Yorkshireman never looked comfortable from the start against 33-year-old Cuevas, a clay-court specialist who has won all of his six ATP Tour singles titles on the surface.

After losing his opening service game of the match, Edmund fought back to level the first set at 4-4 before Cuevas ran away with the tie-break.

Cuevas caused problems with his dominant backhand as Edmund struggled to unload his favoured forehand, the Briton winning just four points on his way to losing the final four games of the second set.

That left Edmund needing to do something he had never done in his career – win from two sets down in a five-set match.

From this position he had lost 13 previous matches and another exit followed when he shook hands with world number 47 Cuevas.

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View Schedule: Djokovic, Thiem & Zverev Feature On Day 5 At Roland Garros

  • Posted: May 30, 2019

View Schedule: Djokovic, Thiem & Zverev Feature On Day 5 At Roland Garros

Del Potro, Fognini also headline Thursday schedule

Top seed Novak Djokovic continues his quest for the “Nole Slam”, while fourth seed Dominic Thiem and fifth seed Alexander Zverev look to move closer to their first Grand Slam title on Day 5 at Roland Garros. Eighth seed Juan Martin del Potro also headlines Thursday action.

Djokovic heads to Court Philippe-Chatrier to face Swiss Henri Laaksonen, who is competing in the second round in Paris for the first time. The Serbian got off to a hot start this fortnight with a straight-sets victory over Pole Hubert Hurkacz. Djokovic lifted his 33rd ATP Masters 1000 title this month at the Mutua Madrid Open (d. Tsitsipas) and finished runner-up at the Internazionali BNL d’Italia (l. to Nadal). Djokovic has never lost in the second round here (14-0) or before the quarter-finals since 2009.

You May Also Like: Laver On Djokovic’s Chase For ‘Nole Slam’: ‘I’m Not Sure How He Does It’

Thiem opens up play on Court Philippe-Chatrier against Kazakhstan’s Alexander Bublik. The Austrian was made to work in his four-set opening-round win over American wild card Tommy Paul. His season includes a title at the Barcelona Open Banc Sabadell (d. Medvedev) and his first Masters 1000 crown at the BNP Paribas Open (d. Federer). Bublik has won three ATP Challenger Tour titles this year.

Fifth seed Zverev takes on Swedish #NextGenATP qualifier Mikael Ymer, who won his maiden Grand Slam main draw match on Tuesday over Slovenian qualifier Blaz Rola. Zverev spent five sets and more than four hours on court in his first-round win on Tuesday over Aussie John Millman. The German has logged plenty of match time lately, saving two championship points to win his first title of the season last week at the Banque Eric Sturdza Geneva Open (d. Jarry).

Del Potro faces Japanese player Yoshihito Nishioka. The eighth seed won their only FedEx ATP Head2Head meeting this February at the Delray Beach Open by VITACOST.com. Del Potro, who defeated Chilean Nicolas Jarry in his opening round, is competing in only his fourth tournament this year due to a right knee injury. He’s shown solid form on clay by holding two match points in his quarter-final loss in Rome to Djokovic. Nishioka defeated American Mackenzie McDonald in five sets on Tuesday for his maiden win in Paris.

Other notable matches on Thursday include ninth-seeded Fabio Fognini of Italy taking on Argentine Federico Delbonis and No. 13 seed Borna Coric of Croatia going up against South African Lloyd Harris.

More On #RG19

* Djokovic, Chasing All Four Slams, Feels Extra Motivation
* After Rome Surprise, Del Potro Ready For Roland Garros
* For Lajovic, Business Is Good At Roland Garros

ORDER OF PLAY – THURSDAY, 30 MAY 2019

Court Philippe-Chatrier start 11:00
[4] Dominic Thiem vs Alexander Bublik
Two WTA matches
[22] Lucas Pouille vs Martin Klizan

Court Suzanne Lenglen start 11:00
WTA match
[1] Novak Djokovic vs [LL] Henri Laaksonen
[14] Gael Monfils vs Adrian Mannarino
WTA match

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Court Simonne-Mathieu start 11:00
WTA match
[5] Alexander Zverev vs [Q] Mikael Ymer
[8] Juan Martin del Potro vs Yoshihito Nishioka
WTA match

Court No. 1 start 11:00
Two WTA matches
[23] Fernando Verdasco vs [WC] Antoine Hoang
[9] Fabio Fognini vs Federico Delbonis

Court No. 14 start 11:00
WTA match
[Q] Salvatore Caruso vs [26] Gilles Simon
WTA match
[10] Karen Khachanov vs [WC] Gregoire Barrere

Court No. 7 start 11:00
WTA match
[30] Dusan Lajovic vs [WC] Elliot Benchetrit
[13] Borna Coric vs Lloyd Harris

Court No. 6 start 11:00
[28] Kyle Edmund vs Pablo Cuevas
Leonardo Mayer vs [17] Diego Schwartzman TF 4-6, 6-3, 6-4, 3-3
[13] Jurgen Melzer / Nicolas Mahut vs Marco Cecchinato / Andreas Seppi
WTA match
[18] Roberto Bautista Agut vs Taylor Fritz

Court No. 9 start 11:00
[14] Robin Haase / Frederik Nielsen vs Daniel Evans / Cameron Norrie

Court No. 10 start 11:00
Two WTA matches
[11] Rajeev Ram / Joe Salisbury vs Damir Dzumhur / Filip Krajinovic

Court No. 11 start 11:00
WTA match
[1] Lukasz Kubot / Marcelo Melo vs Marcus Daniell / Wesley Koolhof

Court No. 12 start 11:00
WTA match
[7] Bob Bryan / Mike Bryan vs Ken Skupski / Neal Skupski
Jan-Lennard Struff vs Radu Albot

Court No. 13 start 11:00
Two WTA matches
Ivo Karlovic vs Jordan Thompson

 

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