07/06/2024

Fresh from making even more Grand Slam history, Novak Djokovic continues his pursuit of French Open glory on Monday, pitting his wits against Francisco Cerundolo in round four.

The top seed emerged triumphant in a five-set classic with Lorenzo Musetti over the weekend, while his South American foe fought back from a set down to eliminate Tommy Paul in four.

The clock had ticked over to 3:07am – the latest finish in the history of the tournament – by the time that Djokovic sent one final fizzing forehand return past Musetti, thereby wrapping up an epic 7-5 6-7[8] 2-6 6-3 6-0 victory after a four-hour and 29-minute battle.

The Serbian was physically spent for a large portion of the match – needing to hunch over and catch his breath on several occasions while also making a couple of fatal serve-and-volley errors – but for all of his travails in the first four sets, Djokovic closed out a historic victory with a brilliant bagel.

Now on 369 wins in Grand Slam competitions, Djokovic has equalled Roger Federer for the most singles victories at major events in the Open Era, while also posting his 36th five-set Grand Slam win, putting the 37-year-old in yet another class of his own.

There were certainly aspects of Djokovic’s third-round showing that the world number one would not have been pleased with – he failed to save any of the five break points that he faced and also struck fewer winners and hit more unforced errors than Musetti – but a 25th major coronation remains firmly in his sights.

While he may still be waiting for his first honour of 2024, the world number one has never been defeated in the fourth round of French Open and has not been eliminated at this stage of any Grand Slam event since the 2020 US Open, when he was disqualified for inadvertently hitting a ball into a line judge’s throat.

In terms of pure fourth-round Grand Slam defeats, Djokovic’s last such experience came at the 2019 US Open, leaving unfancied foe Cerundolo well and truly up against it to deny him a quarter-final showdown versus either Taylor Fritz or Casper Ruud.

The Argentinian 23rd seed did not drop a set in either of his opening battles against Yannick Hanfmann or Filip Misolic before coming unstuck against Paul in their opening exchange, but he quickly rectified those mistakes to prevail 3-6 6-3 6-3 6-2 in two hours and 55 minutes.

Five double faults and 47 unforced errors did not help Cerundolo’s cause, but the 25-year-old was unrelenting on return and brought up a staggering 19 break points – converting five of them – to reach round four at Roland Garros for the second successive year.

Cerundolo’s best Grand Slam result to date came on the Parisian clay in 2023, where he was cruelly denied a place in the quarter-finals by Holger Rune in a five-set spectacular, before coincidentally sinking Paul at Eastbourne for his second ATP Tour title.

Each of Cerundolo’s previous three finals had all been fought on clay, though – the Argentine sunk Sebastian Baez at the 2022 Swedish Open to clinch his maiden top-level honour – and such specialities must be harnessed if he is to prolong Djokovic’s wait for major title number 25.

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