Thursday, September 19, 2024

Day 8 – Match of the day session: Stef’s grand plan – Roland-Garros

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Four to watch

Court Philippe-Chatrier, first match: Iga Swiatek vs Anastasia Potapova

It was Swiatek’s 23rd birthday on Friday and by way of celebration she booked her place in the fourth round with a straight-sets win. It was just another decent day at the office for the defending champion: no dramas, no shocks. Just the way she likes it. 

In Potapova, she faces another birthday girl (she turned 23 the day before Swiatek) but there the similarity ends. She is ranked 40 places below Swiatek, she has won less in her entire career than Swiatek has this year ($3.5million to the Pole’s $4.2million) and she has won two singles titles to Swiatek’s 21 – four of which are Grand Slams. It will be a difficult task for Potapova.

Court Suzanne-Lenglen, first match: Marketa Vondrousova vs Olga Danilovic 

Vondrousova knows all about her next opponent: she grew up playing Danilovic in the juniors and there are few secrets between them – even fewer since the Czech watched all of Danilovic’s emotional, rollercoaster win over Donna Vekic on Friday.

“It’s going to be very tough on clay,” Vondrousova said. “She’s doing an amazing job, so it’s also fourth round and second week, so I think anything can happen now.”

Except that Danilovic has never been in a fourth round of a Grand Slam before while Vondrousova is the reigning Wimbledon champion and the Roland-Garros finalist of 2019. The odds are stacked in the Czech’s favour.

Court Philippe-Chatrier, second match: Coco Gauff vs Elisabetta Cocciaretto

That Gauff should be in the second week of Roland-Garros comes as no surprise; that Cocciaretto should be her opponent – that raised some eyebrows. The Italian world No.51 has already taken out two top-20 seeds (Beatriz Haddad Maia and Liudmila Samsonova) and she feels right at home on these courts (they remind her of home and the courts she grew up on).

She has played Gauff before, too. She lost that meeting in Dubai back in February but she knows what to expect today. “I try to not do the same errors,” she said. “I’ll try to be aggressive, try to do my game, and just fight every point.”

And that is exactly what Gauff is wary of. “I know she’s a fighter,” the world No.3 said. “She fights all the time. No matter what the score is, she’s not giving up until the last point.” 

Court Philippe-Chatrier, third match: Carlos Alcaraz vs Felix Auger-Aliassime

Let’s begin with a stat: Auger-Aliassime is one of the few players with a winning head-to-head record over Alcaraz. He leads 3-2. And the other side of that stat? He hasn’t beaten the Spaniard in two years.

Just to make Auger-Aliassime’s job even harder, Alcaraz is feeling on top of the world. His forearm injury is not quite forgotten but he is thinking of it less and less in matches, and against Sebi Korda on Friday he was clattering his forehand as and when he wanted to.

“Physically I felt amazing, honestly,” he said with his trademark smile. Felix will be pleased.

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