French Open 2018: Rafael Nadal v Diego Schwartzman held up by rain
French Open 2018 |
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Venue: Roland Garros, Paris Dates: 27 May-10 June |
Coverage: Daily live radio and text commentaries on BBC Radio 5 live sports extra, the BBC Sport website and app. |
Top seed Rafael Nadal will resume his fight to stay in the French Open on Thursday after his quarter-final against Argentina’s Diego Schwartzman was held up by rain.
Nadal, aiming for an 11th French Open title, trails the 11th seed 6-3 3-5.
The Spaniard lost his first set at Roland Garros since 2015 before a one-hour rain delay halted play.
Nadal, 32, fought back when the match resumed but more rain came and it was abandoned for the day at 18:37 BST.
Nadal and Schwartzman will resume a gripping last-eight match at 11:00 BST on Thursday, with the 25-year-old Argentine seeking to become only the third player to beat Nadal in 86 singles matches at the French Open.
Nadal suffered a shock last-16 loss to Sweden’s Robin Soderling in 2009 and, less surprisingly, to then-world number one Novak Djokovic in their 2015 quarter-final.
He also pulled out of the 2016 tournament with a wrist injury before his last-32 match against fellow Spaniard Marcel Granollers.
Wednesday’s other quarter-final was also postponed until 11:00 BST on Thursday because of the rain, with Croatian third seed Marin Cilic and Argentina’s Juan Martin del Potro level at 5-5 in a first-set tie-break.
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Who will the delay benefit?
Nadal is the hot favourite to win the tournament, having dominated on the red clay since making his debut in 2005.
But a seismic shock looked on the cards when Schwartzman, who has not beaten Nadal in five previous attempts, won the first set.
Despite only standing 5ft 7in, the Argentine possesses a stinging forehand and used it aggressively to rock 16-time major winner Nadal.
He hit 20 winners as Nadal’s winning streak of 37 sets at Roland Garros, going back to his 2015 quarter-final defeat by Novak Djokovic, was ended.
Nadal, who spent almost three months out of the game after the 2016 French Open with a wrist injury, needed treatment on both of his wrists at the end of the first set.
The world number one went a break down at 2-1 in the second set, only for Schwartzman to hand it straight back to love.
But the inspired Argentine broke Nadal again to claim a 3-2 lead.
Then came the hour-long rain break, which disrupted Schwartzman’s momentum and allowed Nadal to regroup.
Nadal, returning with his famed forehand finally firing on all cylinders, earned back-to-back breaks to move within a hold of the set.
He led 30-15 as he aimed to tie the match before more rain arrived and the players ran off court – this time for the night.
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