French Open: Zverev storms into semis with commanding victory over Jodar
Paris, June 2
Second seed Alexander Zverev kept his French Open aspirations alive with a dominant 7-6 6-1 6-3 victory over teen prodigy Rafael Jodar to reach the Roland Garros semifinals for the fifth time in six years.
A finalist here last year, Zverev was given a tough time by the Spanish 19-year-old in the opening set on Court Philippe-Chatrier, but the 29-year-old was unfazed as he rallied from 2-5 down to secure a victory which took two hours and 17 minutes.
"It was tough," he admitted after the match. "He was in rhythm, perfect rhythm, in the first set. And I wasn't. I was very short and very defensive. Conditions under the roof are very different. The string tension is different, and the ground is different.
"The ball wasn't jumping as high, and really heavy topspin wasn't good here, and I had to be a little bit flatter."
The German conceded that Jodar was all over him in the opening set of the clash. "He was playing great, and he was better at the beginning of the first set, but I was able to come back, and he played a bit nervously when he was serving for the set, and I took my chances then, and it was a good match from there."
Despite reaching the quarter-finals of this event, leading the way with 19 clay court wins this season, the 19-year-old looked set to snatch the opening set as he broke serve for a 5-2 lead, but Zverev's class told, with the German winning five of the next six games to force a tie break. Zverev then raced to 3-3 before rattling off four straight points to claim the set.
From there, Zverev dominated. Winning 71% of points behind his first serve and hitting a host of forehands, as he strung seven consecutive games together from 1-1 in the second set to establish a two-set and break advantage.
That dominance was underlined by his seven straight games between the second and third sets. He has now lost just one set in five here this year and, with Jannik Sinner and Novak Djokovic out of the draw, Zverev must consider himself the favourite for a first Grand Slam.
Jakub Mensik or Joao Fonseca await Zverev in either a clash of young guns or a duel of the old, but either way, despite reaching another Roland Garros semi-final, Zverev is not looking at what lies beyond for now.
"I want to continue," he said. "I want to be in the tournament, I want to win the matches that I haven't been (winning). My goal.
"I feel like today was a very tough test against a very good player, and I did manage, I did win it. Of course, I'm happy to be in the semi-finals, but only for now. That's it."
— IANS
Reader Comments
With Sinner and Djokovic out, this really is Zverev's best chance for a Grand Slam title. But I worry about his consistency in big moments. Remember last year's final? Still, impressive performance today. Let's see if he can finally break through! 🏆
Tough luck for Jodar. That first set was his to win - serving at 5-2 and then losing the next five games. Reminds me of how young players sometimes crumble under pressure against the top guys. Great experience for him though. Zverev was clinical once he got going.
Honestly, I thought Jodar would push him more after that first set. But Zverev just shifted gears and made it look easy. The German is playing some of the best tennis of his career on clay. Not sure anyone can stop him now. Mensik vs Fonseca should be interesting too!
Zverev saying he played "too short and too defensive" in the first set - that's the kind of self-awareness that separates good players from great ones. He adjusted, got flatter, and dominated. Still, beating a 19-year-old in a Grand Slam quarter is one thing. Winning the whole thing is another. Let's see.
Call me skeptical, but Zverev hasn't shown he can close the deal in a major final. Yes, he's been to the semis five times in six years, but only one final to show for it. And that was a five-set loss to Alcaraz. With
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