Djokovic through after huge scare as Musetti retires
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[June 08, 2021]
PARIS (Reuters) -World number
one Novak Djokovic survived a huge scare as he fought back from two
sets down against teenager Lorenzo Musetti to reach the French Open
quarter-finals on Monday after his Italian opponent retired with
cramps in the fifth set.
Top seed Djokovic was outplayed by an inspired Musetti as he lost
two tiebreaks, but the match then changed dramatically as the Serb
fought back to 6-7(7) 6-7(2) 6-1 6-0 4-0 before progressing to the
last eight in Paris for the 15th time.
He will play another Italian after Matteo Berrettini was handed a
walkover after Roger Federer's withdrawal.
World number 76 Musetti's stylish game was threatening to send
Djokovic to his earliest Roland Garros exit since 2009.
But having produced tennis of the highest calibre in two sensational
sets, Musetti blew up as the effort he had expended to eclipse
Djokovic caught up with him.
The 19-year-old Musetti lost the third set in 24 minutes and did not
even get a point in set four until the fifth game as the match
slipped away from him.
"It's not an injury," he explained later. "It's just a little bit of
cramps and a little bit of low back pain.
"There was no chance that I could win a point, so I decided to
retire because I think it was the best thing."
MUSETTI QUITS
A relieved Djokovic went 4-0 ahead in the decider before Musetti
quit in an anti-climactic end to what was brewing up to be a seismic
shock in a tournament already full of surprises.
Djokovic said he had felt nervous before the match and even "liked"
the fact that he lost the opening two sets.
"I don't know, I just played under a certain kind of tension and
wasn't able to go through my shots," he told reporters.
"Just not playing and not feeling great in the first couple of sets.
But credit to him for playing well in important moments. After I
lost the second set and went out to change and came back, I just
felt different. I was a different player."
Musetti dropped serve early on but hit back when Djokovic made a
backhand error and from then on went toe-to-toe with the 18-time
Grand Slam champion who appeared unsure how to counter the all-court
flair of his young opponent.
Djokovic was 4-1 ahead in the first set tiebreak but Musetti
unleashed two stunning single-handed backhand winners to close the
gap and then carved out a set point when Djokovic dragged a forehand
into the net at 5-5.
Musetti smiled ruefully when Djokovic saved that with a forehand
flush onto the sideline. But the young Italian swiped away two
forehand winners to take the opener.
[to top of second column] |
Novak Djokovic (SRB) in action during
his match against Lorenzo Musetti (ITA) on day nine of the French
Open at Stade Roland Garros. Mandatory Credit: Susan Mullane-USA
TODAY Sports
DJOKOVIC RATTLED
A rattled Djokovic blazed a forehand wide to surrender serve early
in the second set but quickly replied as Musetti's concentration
wavered.
Djokovic had to dig deep to save break points at 2-3 and 3-4 and
eventually took the set into a tiebreak.
A terrible misjudgement by Djokovic saw him leave an improvised lob
from Musetti that landed on the baseline with the Serb bizarrely
offering no shot.
When Musetti punished more Djokovic errors to move two sets ahead it
seemed he was on the brink of a momentous victory.
Djokovic left the court to change clothes and when he returned, he
might have suspected Musetti had been replaced by a look-alike. He
broke serve straight away and suddenly the Italian looked lost,
making basic errors and appearing sluggish.
Djokovic needed no second invitation to take advantage and lost only
14 points in levelling the match in a flash -- the third and fourth
sets lasted 46 minutes in total compared with the 75 minutes it took
Musetti to win the superb opener.
After that, there was no way back for teenager Musetti as the
34-year-old Djokovic overturned a two-set deficit for only the fifth
time in his career.
"It's unfortunate for a young player like him," Djokovic said. "He
was unable to physically sustain the level."
(Reporting by Martyn Herman; Editing by Ken Ferris and Hugh Lawson)
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