Djokovic survives wobble to ease
past error-prone Nadal, Swiatek cruises
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[July 30, 2024]
By Karolos Grohmann
PARIS (Reuters) - Serbia's top-seeded Novak Djokovic overcame a
brief bout of nerves in the second set before beating 14-times
French Open champion Rafael Nadal 6-1 6-4 at the Paris Olympics on
Monday and moving into the third round.
His counterpart in the women's draw, world number one Iga Swiatek of
Poland had an even easier morning, crushing France's Diane Parry 6-1
6-1 to book her own third round spot.
While Djokovic remains in the hunt for his elusive Olympic gold,
Spain's Nadal now has only the doubles competition left to add to
his two Olympic gold medals, partnering Carlos Alcaraz.
Djokovic led 6-1 4-0 before a Nadal comeback attempt that saw him
briefly level 4-4.
"I was just very proud to be part of this match and ... I wanted to
do my job on the court and really execute the game plan as much as I
possibly can," Djokovic said.
"So almost a perfect match, the 6-1 4-0. Then things got
complicated, I started to hesitate a little bit on my shot he
stepped in, the crowd got involved and for all, it was really
anybody's set, anybody's game. Just very glad to overcome this
incredible challenge."
Alcaraz was also in action in the singles but was never seriously
pressured in his 6-1 7-6 victory over Dutch opponent Tallon
Griekspoor. Eighth-seed Stefanos Tsitsipas punched his ticket for
the next round, with the Greek finding even less resistance in his
6-1 6-2 victory over Britain's Daniel Evans.
Sixth seed Casper Ruud of Norway was made to work harder in his
three-set win over Italy's Andrea Vavassori.
In the women's draw Swiatek was joined in the next round by Czech
Barbora Krejcikova, the new Wimbledon champion, who advanced with a
straight sets victory over China's Wang Xinyu as did American Coco
Gauff, beating Argentine Maria Lourdes Carle 6-1 6-1.
DJOKOVIC PRECISION
But all eyes were on the Nadal-Djokovic showdown with the crowd
desperate to see the world's best claycourt player make one last one
run in Paris even though his best playing days are long behind him.
"I was not able to put him in difficult positions," Nadal said. "I
was not able to have enough quality shots, enough quality of
movements. Playing against Novak without creating damage to him and
without having the legs of 20 years ago is almost impossible."
[to top of second column] |
Paris 2024 Olympics - Tennis - Men's Singles Second Round - Roland-Garros
Stadium, Paris, France - July 29, 2024. Novak Djokovic of Serbia
celebrates after winning his match against Rafael Nadal of Spain.
REUTERS/Violeta Santos Moura
At age 37, Djokovic, with 24 Grand Slam singles
titles to Nadal's 22, has remained more competitive than his
injury-plagued opponent. He left nothing to chance in a flawless
display over a set and a half.
The world number two stretched the 38-year-old with punishing
groundstrokes and perfect drop shots, making him look his age and
racing through the first set and a half.
The crowd, ready for a mouth-watering epic on their record-extending
60th encounter, instead were being treated to what looked like a
fast-track Djokovic win.
Nadal, with his thigh strapped due to a recent injury, was spilling
unforced errors across Court Philippe Chatrier, lacking precision
and consistency.
With the crowd sensing the end of an era was approaching, Nadal was
desperate to avoid one of the most bruising defeats of his career on
his favourite clay surface.
A Djokovic double fault saw Nadal pull back to 4-2 and that was
celebrated like a victory with almost the entire stadium jumping
from their seats to cheer him on.
The Spaniard was level a little later but it was nothing more than a
brief reprieve as Djokovic sealed victory on his first match point
with an ace.
(Reporting by Karolos Grohmann; Additional reporting by Sybille de
la Hamaide and John Irish, Editing by Alison Williams, Ken Ferris
and Christian Radnedge)
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