Djokovic enters French Open quarters with five-set comeback over Musetti

World No.1 Novak Djokovic completed a stunning turnaround to beat Italian Lorenzo Musetti in a five-set contest to enter his 12th straight French Open quarterfinal.

Published : Jun 07, 2021 20:32 IST

Djokovic who lost the first two sets in the tie-breaker 6-7 (7) 6-7(2) to the 19-year-old Musetti, made a remarkable return by waltzing his opponent 6-1 6-0 in the next two sets.
Djokovic who lost the first two sets in the tie-breaker 6-7 (7) 6-7(2) to the 19-year-old Musetti, made a remarkable return by waltzing his opponent 6-1 6-0 in the next two sets.
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Djokovic who lost the first two sets in the tie-breaker 6-7 (7) 6-7(2) to the 19-year-old Musetti, made a remarkable return by waltzing his opponent 6-1 6-0 in the next two sets.

World number one Novak Djokovic fought back from two sets down against teenager Lorenzo Musetti to reach the French Open quarterfinals on Monday, after his Italian opponent retired 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 win 6-7(7), 6-7(2), 6-1, 6-0, 4-0.

It was unclear exactly what happened to world number 76 Musetti whose stylish game was threatening to send Djokovic to his earliest Roland Garros exit since 2009.

Having produced tennis of the highest calibre in two sensational sets, Musetti then lost the third set in 24 minutes. And he did not even get a point in set four until the fifth game as the match slipped away from him.

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A relieved Djokovic went 4-0 ahead in the decider before Musetti decided he could not continue.

It was an anti-climactic end to what was brewing up to be a seismic shock in a tournament full of surprises.

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 game of his young opponent.

Djokovic was 4-1 ahead in the first set tiebreak, but Musetti produced 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.

A rattled Djokovic blazed a forehand wide to surrender serve early in the second set, but he 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.

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Djokovic briefly left the court and when he returned, he might have suspected Musetti had been replaced by a look-alike.

He broke serve straight away, and suddenly Musetti looked lost, making basic errors and appearing to lack energy.

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 Musetti.

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