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Rafael Nadal into French Open final with win over Juan Martin del Potro

  • Posted: Jun 08, 2018
2018 French Open men’s final
Venue: Roland Garros, Paris Date: Sunday, 10 June Time: 14:00 BST
Coverage: Live radio and text commentary on BBC Radio 5 live, the BBC Sport website and app.

Top seed Rafael Nadal will bid for a record-extending 11th French Open title after breezing past fifth seed Juan Martin del Potro in the semi-finals.

Nadal, 32, won 6-4 6-1 6-2 to set up a meeting with Austrian seventh seed Dominic Thiem in Sunday’s final.

The Spaniard, who has only lost twice in 87 matches at Roland Garros, beat the Argentine in just over two hours.

Nadal is only the second man after Roger Federer to reach 11 finals at the same Grand Slam.

Thiem, 24, will contest his first major final after beating unseeded Italian Marco Cecchinato in straights sets earlier on Friday.

More soon.

  • How do you beat Nadal on clay?
  • Relive Nadal v Del Potro text coverage
  • Thiem ends Cecchinato’s fairytale run
  • Live scores, schedule and results

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Thiem beats Cecchinato to reach first Slam final

  • Posted: Jun 08, 2018
2018 French Open finals
Venue: Roland Garros, Paris Dates: 9-10 June Times: 14:00 BST
Coverage: Live radio and text commentary on BBC Radio 5 live, the BBC Sport website and app.

Austrian seventh seed Dominic Thiem reached his first Grand Slam final by beating unseeded Italian Marco Cecchinato in three sets at Roland Garros.

Thiem, 24, won 7-5 7-6 (12-10) 6-1 against the 25-year-old, who shocked Novak Djokovic in the quarter-finals.

Thiem edged the first two sets before clinching the third in 21 minutes.

He will play Rafael Nadal in Sunday’s final after the Spaniard’s win over Argentina’s Juan Martin del Potro.

  • Relive Thiem v Cecchinato and Nadal v Del Potro
  • Live scores, schedule and results
  • How do you stop Nadal on clay?

“The big key was the second-set tie-break because it was very close and I saved I think three set points,” said Thiem.

“If I lost that tie-break it would have been a very close match and I didn’t want that.

“Of course it’s very important to have a good recovery now. I’ll watch the other semi-final to study my opponent and then it’s full power on Sunday.”

Thiem closer to fulfilling promise?

Thiem has long been considered as a Grand Slam champion in the making, with Roland Garros seemingly his best opportunity.

Nobody has won more clay-court matches on the ATP tour than Thiem this year, while he is the only person to have beaten Nadal on the red dirt in the past two years.

Those victories came over three sets in Rome and Madrid – and he now faces the ultimate test after top seed Nadal overcame fifth seed Del Potro in the second semi-final in straight sets.

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Thiem started quickly against Cecchinato, breaking at the first opportunity and then seizing control with some dominant serving which saw him drop just one point with the ball in hand.

A wobble at 4-3 allowed the Italian to level, only for Thiem to regain control with another break for 6-5 and then serve out for the first set.

Cecchinato batted off three break points in the second set, his serve proving impenetrable as it went to a thrilling tie-break.

Thiem missed four set points, Cecchinato spurning three, before the Austrian finally clinched it when Cecchinato went long.

And he swept through the third – albeit with a brief wobble when he saved two break points in the final game – to become only the second Austrian player to reach a Slam final following Thomas Muster.

“Of course there is pressure especially in Grand Slam finals,” said Thiem.

“I have gone a very long way now and I don’t want to lose the finals; otherwise, it’s not a very nice feeling.

“But on the other hand, it’s so tough to go all the way in such a tournament. Facing Rafa, I’m not the one who has the pressure.”

Cecchinato’s dream run finally ended

Cecchinato was not a name known to many outside tennis circles before his exploits at Roland Garros.

And if he was, it was more likely because of the 18-month ban – later reduced to 12 months and then overturned – given to him by the Italian Tennis Federation for match-fixing rather than his on-court history.

He had never won a main draw match at a Grand Slam before this fortnight.

But his journey through the draw has been a memorable one: winning his opener in five sets, then knocking out Marco Trungelliti following the Argentine lucky loser’s 10-hour car journey to Paris, before putting out 10th seed Pablo Carreno Busta and eighth seed David Goffin.

All of that was topped by a gripping quarter-final win against 12-time Grand Slam champion Novak Djokovic.

However, he could not reach the same heights against Thiem, despite having the vocal backing of a noisy Court Philippe Chatrier.

He showed glimpses of his ability – particularly from his one-handed backhand – and fondness for drop-shots but his confidence and energy visibly wilted after being edged out in the second-set tie-break.

From that point the world number 72’s run looked to be over, and so it proved as Thiem cleaned up victory.

“If I won the second set, I think the third set is totally different,” said Cecchinato, who is set to move into the world’s top 30 for the first time.

“I went a little bit down mentally and physically because I have played so many matches.

“Reaching the semi-final at Roland Garros is very special. Now I want to work more, think positive and maybe I can go to the top 20.”

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Pavic/Marach Continue Senational Season, Advance To Roland Garros Final

  • Posted: Jun 08, 2018

Pavic/Marach Continue Senational Season, Advance To Roland Garros Final

No. 2 seeds to face home favourites Herbert & Mahut

No doubles team has been as dominant as Oliver Marach and Mate Pavic in 2018. The Austrian-Croatian tandem has already won four tour-level titles out of six finals, soaring to No. 1 (Pavic) and No. 2 (Marach) in the ATP Doubles Rankings.

And on Saturday, they will have a chance to earn their second Grand Slam championship of the season, after defeating No. 12 seeds Feliciano Lopez and Marc Lopez 6-4, 7-5 in the Roland Garros semi-finals. The second seeds broke three times to advance after one hour, 32 minutes.

Marach and Pavic now have 36 match wins as a team this season. The pair has gained a sizeable lead in the ATP Doubles Race To London, guaranteeing that regardless of the result in the final, they will sit in first by at least 1,295 points.

It appeared that Marach and Pavic would need to win their third consecutive three-setter, as the Spaniards broke for a 5-3 lead in the second set. But the favourites strung together the final four games of the match, breaking twice and losing just one point on serve, to advance to the final on the Parisian terre battue.

The championship match will be a difficult one, as Marach and Pavic look to beat home favourites Pierre-Hugues Herbert and Nicolas Mahut. Less than four months ago, the Frenchmen ended Marach and Pavic’s 17-0 start to the campaign in the final of the ABN Amro World Tennis Tournament.

Herbert and Mahut have won both of their FedEx ATP Head2Head meetings against their final opponents, and are seeking their third Grand Slam trophy (2015 US Open, 2016 Wimbledon). Marach and Pavic, on the other hand, are the reigning Australian Open titlists.

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Roland Garros SF Preview: Nadal Meets Delpo In Blockbuster

  • Posted: Jun 07, 2018

Roland Garros SF Preview: Nadal Meets Delpo In Blockbuster

ATPWorldTour.com previews the second Roland Garros semi-final on Friday

[1] Rafael Nadal (ESP) vs. [6] Juan Martin del Potro (ESP)
FedEx ATP Head2Head: Nadal leads Del Potro 9-5

Ten-time Roland Garros champion Rafael Nadal and Juan Martin del Potro, playing some of the best tennis of his career in 2018, will square off in a blockbuster semi-final in south-west Paris on Friday.

While Nadal has a 9-5 lead against Del Potro in their FedEx ATP Head2Head series, the pair has met only twice before on clay courts. In their two completed red dirt matches, Nadal beat Del Potro 7-5, 6-3, 6-2 at the Paris major in 2007 and 1-6, 6-4, 6-1, 7-6(0) in the 2011 Davis Cup final. Nadal also won their last clash in the 2017 US Open semi-finals 4-6, 6-0, 6-3, 6-2.

Nadal, who celebrated his 32nd birthday on 3 June, is looking to secure a place in his 23rd Grand Slam championship final (16-7), while Del Potro, free from the wrist injuries that have hindered his progress for the past eight years, attempts to reach his second major final and add to his 2009 US Open crown (d. Federer).

View FedEx ATP Head2Head for the Roland Garros semi-finals & vote for who you think will win! 
Nadal vs Del Potro | Thiem vs Cecchinato

 

Read Roland-Garros Semi-Final Reports
Nadal Charges Past Schwartzman After Rain
Delpo Makes Emotional Return To SFs

You May Also Like: Roland Garros SF Preview: Thiem Set To Face Cecchinato

Beating Nadal on clay is one of the sport’s hardest propositions and at Roland Garros, where he has won an astonishing 84 matches, only two players — Robin Soderling in the 2009 fourth round and Novak Djokovic in the 2015 quarter-finals — have got the better of the Spanish superstar over five sets. Over the course of his 16-season pro career, Nadal is 108-2 in best-of-five-set matches on clay.

So far in 2018, Nadal has put together a 28-2 match record (24-1 on clay courts). During the spring European clay-court swing the left-hander has picked up 11th titles at both the Rolex Monte-Carlo Masters (d. Nishikori) and the Barcelona Open Banc Sabadell (d. Tsitipsas), in addition to an eighth trophy at the Internazionali BNL d’Italia (d. A. Zverev). His lone defeat on red dirt came against Dominic Thiem in the Mutua Madrid Open quarter-finals.

The 29-year-old Del Potro, who will be contesting his fifth Grand Slam championship semi-finals, has so far produced one of the best seasons of his career (28-6 match record). He has won two trophies at the Abierto Mexicano Telcel presentado por HSBC (d. Anderson) and his first ATP World Tour Masters 1000 trophy at the BNP Paribas Open (d. Federer) during a 15-match winning streak. The Argentine has also finished as runner-up at the ASB Classic (l. to Bautista Agut) in the second week of the year, which heralded his return to the Top 10 of the ATP Rankings.

Already assured of a place in the world’s Top 4 on Monday with his semi-final run, Del Potro is hoping to follow in the footsteps of his Argentine compatriots — Guillermo Vilas (1975, 1977-78, 1982), Gaston Gaudio (2004), Guillermo Coria (2004) and Mariano Puerta (2005) — by reaching Sunday’s Roland Garros final.

Nadal has spent marginally more time on the show courts at Roland Garros (13 hours, 10 minutes), while Del Potro has spent 12 hours and 59 minutes on court in his five victories.

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Mahut/Herbert Reach Roland Garros Final

  • Posted: Jun 07, 2018

Mahut/Herbert Reach Roland Garros Final

Frenchmen looking to win third Grand Slam title

While Pierre-Hugues Herbert and Nicolas Mahut had reached the championship match at the three other Grand Slam tournaments, they had not enjoyed much success together at their home major – until this year. 

The Frenchmen, who had bowed out in the Round of 16 in 2015-16 and in their 2017 opener, moved within one win of the Roland Garros title with their 6-3, 6-4 semi-final victory over No. 8 seed Nikola Mektic and Alexander Peya on Thursday. Mektic and Peya had claimed the ATP World Tour Masters 1000 title last month at the Mutua Madrid Open, and were attempting to reach their fourth final of the clay-court swing. 

The sixth seeds now await the winner between No. 2 seeds Oliver Marach and Mate Pavic, the reigning Australian Open champions, and No. 12 seeds Feliciano Lopez and Marc Lopez, the 2016 Roland Garros champions. Marach/Pavic and Lopez/Lopez face off in semi-final action Friday afternoon. 

Herbert and Mahut will be looking to win their third Grand Slam title, following triumphs at the 2015 US Open and at Wimbledon in 2016. They were also runners-up at the 2015 Australian Open (l. to Bolelli/Fognini).

You May Also Like: Mahut Records 300th Doubles Win

Only two other French tandems have won the Roland Garros men’s doubles crown in the Open Era: Henri Leconte and Yannick Noah in 1984 and Julien Benneteau and Edouard Roger-Vasselin in 2014.

Mahut, 36, came close to winning the Roland Garros title in 2013 alongside countryman Michael Llodra. The pair lost a heartbreaker against top seeds Bob Bryan and Mike Bryan, leading 4-2 in the decisive tie-break before the Bryans came back to win 6-4, 4-6, 7-6(4).

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French Open 2018: How do you stop 'King of Clay' Rafael Nadal?

  • Posted: Jun 07, 2018
French Open 2018
Venue: Roland Garros, Paris Dates: 27 May-10 June
Coverage: Daily live radio and text commentaries on BBC Radio 5 live, the BBC Sport website and app.

The beauty about sport is we never know what might happen when we arrive at a stadium or turn on our television.

But one thing comes as close to sporting certainty as anything else we have seen over the past 13 years: Rafael Nadal winning the French Open.

“Some say beating Rafa over five sets on clay is the toughest thing in sport – not just tennis,” says seven-time Grand Slam singles champion John McEnroe. “I would agree with that.”

Since making his debut as a talented teenager in 2005, Nadal has won a record 10 singles titles at Roland Garros – no-one in the men’s game has managed to win as many at the same Grand Slam.

And few are backing anyone other than the 32-year-old Spaniard to lift the Coupe des Mousquetaires again on Sunday, although he must first navigate Friday’s semi-final against fifth seed Juan Martin del Potro (which you can follow via live text and BBC Radio 5 live sports extra commentary).

What makes the man nicknamed the ‘King of Clay’ almost unstoppable on the red dirt? And how do you beat him over five sets in Paris?

We’ve asked former Grand Slam champions McEnroe, Michael Chang and Pat Cash, along with analysts and journalists, to tell us.

His vicious forehand and movement

Nadal won 37 sets in a row at Roland Garros, surpassing his own previous best streak of 32, before Diego Schwartzman stopped him moving closer to Bjorn Borg’s all-time record of 41 by winning the opener in their quarter-final.

Borg won six French Open titles between 1974 and 1981, setting a record that stood until it was surpassed by Nadal in 2012.

“I was around the era where I thought I was watching the greatest – I was at the time – Borg. Nadal eclipses him,” said McEnroe, a Roland Garros finalist in 1984.

Nadal’s main weapon is that vicious, lasso-style forehand which has become his trademark.

Nobody has hit a higher percentage of forehand winners than the Spaniard over the past fortnight, with 12% of his points coming through this shot.

That, added to his sharp movement and supreme athleticism, is what makes Nadal great, according to Chang.

“He has the uncanny ability of being able to hit a lot of forehands and move very well on clay,” the American, who won Roland Garros as a 17-year-old in 1989, told BBC Sport.

“He knows how to manipulate the angles to build to get people out of position.

“He is very aggressive, although patient when he needs to be, but for the most part if the shot is there he is taking it and going for it.

“He’s the one manipulating, making you move and putting you in awkward positions to the point where he has easy cutaways.”

Click to see content: French_open_mens_champions

Being a leftie

Nadal is a left-handed player which, in conjunction with his other attributes, is a key part to his success, according to Chang.

“If Rafa was a right-handed player I don’t think his game would be quite as effective,” said the former world number two.

“Being a leftie means that everything spins the other way.

“The strong forehands always come into a right-handed player’s backhand, hooking him off the court, and the inside out coming back the other way, it is tough to cover.”

Second serve

Click to see content: Nadal_Serve

In tennis, the second serve is the ultimate safety net, allowing players to go all out on their first serve, knowing they have a back-up if they miss.

Second serves are slower and weaker than first serves, and in men’s tennis, these points are where the real contest is waged, says tennis journalist Amy Lundy.

Lundy has produced an in-depth analysis of Nadal’s second service game over the past year and believes a significant improvement in this area is the key to his continued dominance on the red dirt.

“Nadal is taking this backstop and using it to crush his opponents,” she told BBC Sport.

“For most professional tennis players, anything above winning 50% of their second serve points is considered good.

“On clay, Nadal has driven up that percentage to over 66% won on second serve in the past year, heading into the 2018 French Open.”

Click to see content: Nadal_Improvement

Growing up on clay courts

Clay is the natural surface for Spanish players, with about 100,000 red-dirt courts across the country – even most small villages have them.

So it is not surprising that Nadal is the latest in a long line of Spanish success – albeit far more sustained than his predecessors – at Roland Garros.

Nadal’s 10 wins, plus triumphs for Sergi Bruguera (two), Carlos Moya, Albert Costa and Juan Carlos Ferrero, means the nation has accounted for 15 of the past 25 male champions.

“Roland Garros has always been the most special tournament for us,” said Joan Solsona, a Spanish tennis journalist who has worked for daily sports newspaper Marca since 1998.

“So it affects the way you prepare as a tennis player – you want to be good on clay. Playing and learning on clay is natural for Spanish people.”

Majorca-born Nadal first stepped on to clay aged four, starting to practise at his local tennis club in Manacor with his uncle Toni – the man who developed and coached him until retiring last year.

“Nadal was from a small town of 40,000 people and his local club had six or seven clay courts,” added Solsona.

“We are lucky because Spain is a sunny country and this has a big effect. The clay courts stay in good condition in the good weather and means you can practise on them all year round because of the weather.

“We’re also advised that playing on clay is the best surface for children to learn on because it is easier to move on and means they don’t get injured as much.

“So Rafa started moving on clay from a young age and it shows.”

Conditions

The clay surface slows the ball down more than grass, enabling Nadal to use his athleticism to construct his points and tee up that famed forehand.

In turn, it helps him hit the ball harder and more accurately, while the hotter summer temperatures in mainland Europe – where the majority of the clay-court season takes place – help Nadal generate more bounce.

It is notable that Nadal’s successes in Monte Carlo and Rome, two of the tour’s three clay-court Masters tournaments, outnumber those in Madrid – the third – as the high altitude of the Spanish capital means the ball moves quicker.

Temperatures have been around the mid-20Cs at Roland Garros, a level at which they are expected to stay at for the rest of the tournament.

Nadal’s least impressive performance came in the opening set of his quarter-final against Schwartzman, on a colder and damp day before he fought back in warmer conditions, although the 16-time Grand Slam champion said afterwards it did not make a difference.

“Some people say it has to be a cold day where he can’t get the ball through the court,” Cash, who reached the fourth round at the 1988 French Open, told BBC Radio 5 live.

“But if Rafa can’t get the ball fast through the court then who can?

“The hot conditions suit Rafa. He’s bouncing those balls in above your shoulders – they are a foot or two higher than any other player on the circuit.”

Rafa’s clay-court dominance since 2005
French Open 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2017 (10)
Monte Carlo Masters 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2016, 2017, 2018 (11)
Rome Masters 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2010, 2012, 2013, 2018 (8)
Madrid Open* 2010, 2013, 2014, 2017 (4)
Barcelona Open 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2016, 2017, 2018 (11)

*Nadal also won one title in 2004 before Madrid changed from a hard court to a clay court.

How do you beat him?

Nadal has only lost three times in a five-setter at Roland Garros – and one of those came in 2016 when he pulled out of his last-32 match against fellow Spaniard Marcel Granollers with a wrist injury.

Long-time rival Novak Djokovic was the last person to actually beat him on court, winning in straight sets in their 2015 quarter-final.

Djokovic went into the match as the favourite, being the world number one and on a 26-match winning streak.

Nadal’s first defeat on the red clay, however, was a seismic shock.

A last-16 victory in 2009 earned Robin Soderling, an unheralded Swede who had never previously checked into the second week of a Grand Slam, a place in the sport’s history books.

“On that day everything worked for me,” Soderling told BBC World Service.

“You have to be extremely aggressive. There is no other way of beating him on clay.

“You have to play a little bit flatter than you usually do, play close to the baseline and take your chances.

“You need to play with smaller margins and take some risks because no-one will beat him staying two metres from the baseline and beating him on his own terms. You have to take the initiative.”

  • French Open order of play, scores & results
  • How many multiple French Open champions can you name in two minutes?

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Roland Garros Semi-Final Preview: Thiem Set To Face Cecchinato

  • Posted: Jun 07, 2018

Roland Garros Semi-Final Preview: Thiem Set To Face Cecchinato

ATPWorldTour.com previews the first Roland Garros semi-final on Friday

Marco Cecchinato (ITA) vs. [7] Dominic Thiem (AUT)
First FedEx ATP Head2Head meeting

Marco Cecchinato will be hoping to continue his fairy-tale run on Friday in the Roland Garros semi-finals, with the pressure on Dominic Thiem’s shoulders as a two-time semi-finalist in Paris.

Seventh-seeded Austrian Thiem is currently on a nine-match unbeaten streak after winning his 10th ATP World Tour crown at the Banque Eric Sturdza Geneva Open. Cecchinato is playing the best tennis of his career, having beaten Top 10 seeds Pablo Carreno Busta and David Goffin before stunning 2016 champion Djokovic to reach the final four.

View Roland-Garros Singles Draw

You May Also Like: How Cecchinato Can Stun Thiem, Reach Roland Garros Final

Cecchinato

“Cecchinato is full of confidence,” said Thiem. “[He is] probably the most confident player out there right now. He had never won a match at a Slam [before Roland Garros], and now… he’s in the semi-finals. So everything is going easy for him. He can play completely free.”

The 25-year-old Italian has enjoyed a breakthrough European clay season, winning his first ATP World Tour title at the Gazprom Hungarian Open, as a lucky loser, before wins over clay-court specialists Fabio Fognini (BMW Open by FWU) and Pablo Cuevas (Internazionali BNL d’Italia).

Cecchinato, the first Italian man to reach a Grand Slam championship semi-final since Corrado Barazzutti at Roland Garros in 1978, will also draw on his experience of beating his semi-final opponent at the latter stages of a tournament. Cecchinato emerged victorious, in straight sets, when the two met in the final of an ITF Futures event in Italy in 2013.

“I won a match against Dominic Thiem,” said Cecchinato. “So I remember this match, and why not? I want to be believe [I can beat] Dominic Thiem.”

Thiem, with a 25-5 tour-level record on red dirt this year, was highly impressive in his victories over No. 19 seed Kei Nishikori in the fourth round and second seed Alexander Zverev in the quarter-finals. On his fifth tilt at the clay-court major title, the Austrian will be focused on clinching a spot in his first Grand Slam championship final.

Thiem is hoping to follow in the footsteps of fellow Austrian Thomas Muster, the former World No. 1, who lifted the 1995 Roland Garros trophy. Nicola Pietrangeli (1959-60) and Adriano Panatta (1976) are Italy’s only male major singles champions, both in Paris.

View FedEx ATP Head2Head for the Roland Garros semi-finals & vote for who you think will win! 
Nadal vs Del Potro | Thiem vs Cecchinato

 

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