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Sinner out, Zverev beats Ruud to set up Roland Garros final with Alcaraz

tennis07 June 2024 20:18| © AFP
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Carlos Alcaraz beat incoming world No 1 Jannik Sinner 2-6, 6-3, 3-6, 6-4, 6-3 on Friday to reach the Roland Garros final and continue his bid for a third Grand Slam title.


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Alcaraz, 21, will play fourth seed Alexander Zverev on Sunday after becoming the youngest man to reach Grand Slam finals on all three surfaces.

"It's one of the toughest matches I've played for sure," said Alcaraz.

"The toughest I've played in my short career have been against Jannik. I hope to play many, many more like this."

"You have to find the joy in suffering," the Spaniard added.

Alcaraz has won both of his two previous major finals – at Wimbledon last year and the 2022 US Open. Victory on Sunday would see him head to the Australian Open next January seeking a career Grand Slam.

Both Alcaraz and Sinner arrived in Paris under an injury cloud, gradually finding their best level over the course of the tournament to set up a meeting billed as the match "everybody wants to see".

The ninth chapter of an enthralling rivalry destined to shape the future of the sport was the youngest Grand Slam semifinal pairing since Andy Murray beat Rafael Nadal at the 2008 US Open.

It was their first Grand Slam meeting since a spectacular five-set quarterfinal two years ago in New York, and while perhaps not as exhilarating this one was no less gripping.

'LIKE RUNNING A MARATHON'

Alcaraz, who was hampered badly by cramp in last year's semifinal loss to Novak Djokovic, had said that playing Sinner was like running a marathon, and it was the Spaniard doing much of the chasing early.

Sinner pinned Alcaraz on the back foot straight away as he broke in the very first game, blending impenetrable defence with searing groundstrokes as he went on the attack.

After holding with ease the Australian Open champion belted a forehand winner for another break opportunity in the third game, sweeping 3-0 in front following an Alcaraz miscue.

Alcaraz finally got on the board in the fifth game before retrieving a break, but he handed it right back and Sinner bagged the first set when the Spaniard dumped a drop-shot into the net.

Sinner began the second set in identical fashion, earning another break after a loose Alcaraz service game and consolidating for a 2-0 edge on a picture-perfect day in Paris.

SINNER'S LEVEL DROPS

Alcaraz belatedly spluttered into life though as Sinner struggled to maintain his sky-high standards from the opening set and presented his rival three break points with a double-fault.

A brilliant cross-court winner hauled Alcaraz back on serve, with the Spaniard soon accelerating 5-2 ahead following another break as Sinner sprayed his forehand wide.

Sinner temporarily slowed the Alcaraz charge, ending his five-game winning stretch, but the third seed levelled up the match the next game.

The early onslaught from Sinner felt a distant memory as Alcaraz pounced to break for a 2-1 lead in the third set, flicking a sublime backhand passing shot beyond a powerless Sinner.

Yet the momentum was quickly back with Sinner.

He ripped a blistering one-two combination of forehands to get back on serve and then resisted four break points in a lengthy fifth game before holding for 3-2.

Sinner received a massage from the physio for apparent cramp in his right forearm, but he brushed off any physical issue as he hammered a backhand return past Alcaraz to break again.

A tame Alcaraz forehand into the net handed Sinner the third set. A sense of calmness enveloped the fourth, with not a single break point on offer until a sizzling Alcaraz backhand brought about a set point.

He didn't flinch and sent the match to a decider with a winner into the open court.

Alcaraz's approach to grind Sinner down coupled with timely shot-making allowed him to strike the critical blow in the second game of the fifth set.

Sinner, while visibly flagging more than his re-energised rival, did not go down without a fight, but Alcaraz finally put him away after four hours of another seismic showdown.

Alexander Zverev exacted revenge on Casper Ruud at the on Friday to reach his second Grand Slam final and first since 2020, with Carlos Alcaraz standing between him and the title.

ZVEREV BEATS RUUD TO REACH FIRST ROLAND GARROS FINAL

Zverev exacted revenge on Casper Ruud on Friday to reach his second Grand Slam final and first since 2020, with Carlos Alcaraz standing between him and the title.

Fourth seed Zverev, who had lost in the semifinals at Roland Garros in each of the past three years, fought back to beat Ruud 2-6, 6-2, 6-4, 6-2 in a repeat of their last-four clash 12 months ago.

Zverev won just seven games when the pair met in the 2023 semis and a similar story was on the cards after Ruud cruised through the opening set.

But the German raised his game, reaching his first Roland Garros final and keeping his hopes of a maiden Grand Slam title alive.

Zverev holds a career 5-4 winning record against Alcaraz, including a victory in their only previous Roland Garros meeting in the 2022 quarterfinals.

Alcaraz earlier battled past incoming world No 1 Jannik Sinner in five sets.

There will be two first-time finalists for the first year since Rafael Nadal defeated Mariano Puerta for the first of his 14 titles in 2005.

The 27-year-old Zverev's only previous major final appearance saw him blow a two-set lead to lose to Dominic Thiem at the 2020 US Open.

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