Home World News Rafa, Stan through; Novak sent packing

Rafa, Stan through; Novak sent packing

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Defending champion Novak Djokovic crashed out of the French Open on Wednesday, sparking fresh fears over his appetite for the sport he once dominated as Rafael Nadal and Andy Murray made the semifinals.

World No 2 Djokovic slumped to a stunning 7-6 (7/5), 6-3, 6-0 quarterfinal loss to Dominic Thiem for his earliest exit in Paris in seven years.

Nadal, chasing a 10th Roland Garros title, will face 23-year-old Thiem after making the last four without breaking a sweat.

He was 6-2, 2-0 up on Pablo Carreno Busta when his Spanish compatriot quit with an abdominal injury.

Friday’s other semifinal will pitch world No 1 Murray, the runner-up to Djokovic in 2016, against 2015 champion Stanislas Wawrinka.

Murray made the semifinals for the fifth time with a 2-6, 6-1, 7-6 (7/0), 6-1 win over Japanese eighth seed Kei Nishikori.

Wawrinka became the oldest French Open semifinalist in 32 years when he brushed aside Marin Cilic 6-3, 6-3, 6-1.

Djokovic, who had brought in Andre Agassi as coach in an effort to boost his flagging career, hinted he may step back from the sport to regroup even with Wimbledon fast approaching.

“Trust me, I’m thinking about many things, especially in the last couple months,” he said.

“At the same time, I have responsibility to the game itself, towards others. We’ll see. Obviously it’s not an easy decision to make, but I will see how I feel after Roland Garros and then decide what to do next.”

Wednesday’s defeat to Thiem was Djokovic’s first straight-sets loss at a major in four years and comes just 12 months after he completed the career Grand Slam in Paris.

DJOKOVIC ‘UP FOR CHALLENGE’

He then also held all four majors and became the first man to break the $100 million prize money barrier.

Wednesday saw him suffer a first 6-0 ‘bagel’ at a Slam since the 2005 US Open while the defeat will see him slip out of the world’s top two for the first time in six years.

“All the top players go through this. It’s a big challenge but I am up for it,” said Djokovic who was also runner-up in Paris in 2012, 2014 and 2015.

Thiem had lost to the Serb in the semifinals last year and took just one game in a straight-sets loss in Rome in May.

His shock quarterfinal victory was his first in six meetings with the 12-time major winner.

Austrian sixth seed Thiem is the only man to beat Nadal on clay this year – his Rome quarterfinal success offsetting losses in the final in Barcelona and Madrid.

“It’s going to be the toughest match you can imagine,” admitted the 23-year-old.

Fourth seed Nadal recorded his 100th best-of-five-sets victory on clay – from just 102 matches.

He will be playing in his 10th semifinal in Paris and has made it having lost just 22 games through five matches.

Bjorn Borg surrendered just 32 games on his way to the 1978 French Open, but Nadal insisted he has no interest in such records.

“I don’t know how many games I lost this year, but I really don’t care about this. I only care that I am in the semifinals,” said Nadal.

Murray advanced to his fourth straight semifinal in Paris, defeating Nishikori to avenge his loss to the Japanese star at the US Open last year.

The Scot set up a semifinal rematch with third seed Wawrinka after beating the Swiss in four sets at the same stage a year ago.

“He’s played fantastic this tournament so far,” Murray said of the 32-year-old, the oldest Roland Garros semifinalist since Jimmy Connors in 1985.

Like Nadal and Thiem, Wawrinka has not lost a set on his way to a third successive semifinal at Roland Garros.

“It was perfect today, I’m very satisfied,” said reigning US Open champion Wawrinka after a 12th win in 14 meetings with Cilic.

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