Tennis·ROUNDUP

Carlos Alcaraz sweeps Tommy Paul in 3 sets to reach French Open men's semifinals

Carlos Alcaraz continued his French Open title defence with a display of breathtaking brutality for a 6-0 6-1 6-4 victory Tuesday over American 12th seed Tommy Paul and a spot in the Roland Garros semifinals.

Titleholder Iga Swiatek to face top-ranked Aryna Sabalenka in women's semis

Carlos Alcaraz of Spain plays a forehand during a French Open practice session at Roland Garros on June 2, 2025 in Paris, France.
Carlos Alcaraz of Spain has searched in vain for his usual sublime form on Parisian clay this year, needing four sets in his last three matches to dismiss determined opponents, but he had no trouble on a balmy Tuesday evening on Court Philippe Chatrier against American Tommy Paul. (Clive Brunskill/Getty Images)

Carlos Alcaraz continued his French Open title defence with a display of breathtaking brutality for a 6-0 6-1 6-4 victory Tuesday over American 12th seed Tommy Paul and a spot in the Roland Garros semifinals.

The second seed has searched in vain for his usual sublime form on Parisian clay this year, needing four sets in his last three matches to dismiss determined opponents, but he had no trouble on a balmy evening on Court Philippe Chatrier.

"It was like I could close my eyes and everything went in," Alcaraz said in his on-court interview.

"My feeling was unbelievable, I tried to hit my shots at 100 per cent … today was just one of those matches where everything went in.

"We were in the quarterfinals of Roland Garros and these matches aren't easy. I've lost to him twice and against Tommy, matches are very difficult. That helped me focus on my tennis and try not to go down or let him get into the match."

Alcaraz motored through the opening set without dropping a game and grabbed his fourth break early in the second set after sparing Paul the ignominy of another bagel and the 22-year-old pulled further away to double his lead in only 53 minutes.

He glided across the red clay while delivering punishing shots, knocking the racket out of Paul's hands at one point with a thunderous effort, before finally facing some resistance in the third set.

Former junior French Open champion Paul stayed level with Alcaraz until 4-4 but soon faded away and the holder closed out the victory to book a clash with Italian eighth seed Lorenzo Musetti in the semifinals.

Swiatek winning run at Roland Garros now 26 matches

Four-time champion Iga Swiatek's 26th successive win at Roland-Garros on Tuesday set up a semifinal clash against top-ranked Aryna Sabalenka in what will be their first French Open meeting.

Swiatek defeated Elina Svitolina 6-1, 7-5 to extend her impressive run. The consecutive wins record on the Parisian red clay is Chris Evert's 29.

Sabalenka ousted Olympic champion Zheng Qinwen in straight sets to reach the Paris semifinals for the second time. She will face Swiatek on Thursday.

Having been searching for her best form in recent months, Swiatek, who struggled in the previous round, was in total control in the opening set.

Polish tennis player Iga Swiatek leans back and clenches both fists while holding a racket in her right hand to celebrate her quarterfinal victory over Elena Rybakina of Kazakhstan in women’s singles play at the French Open on June 1, 2025 in Paris.
Iga Swiatek of Poland has advanced at the French Open. She has won five of the six matches she's played on clay against Aryna Sabalenka, including a thrilling three-setter in Spain last year. (Adam Pretty/Getty Images)

She was made to work harder by her 13th-seeded Ukrainian rival in the second set, dropping her serve in the fourth game after hitting two straight unforced errors into the net. But Swiatek broke back immediately and took advantage of Svitolina's poor service game to break again with a thunderous forehand return and move up 6-5. Swiatek sealed the win with a final ace.

Swiatek has won five of the six matches she's played on clay against Sabalenka, including a thrilling three-setter in Spain last year.

"The Madrid final against her is one of the best and most exciting finals that I have played," said Swiatek, who has not won a title or reached a final since her victory at Roland-Garros last year. "It is always a challenge against Aryna. She really has a game for every surface."

Sabalenka is trying to reach her sixth Grand Slam final, and first at Roland-Garros.

"We've had a lot of great battles in the past," Sabalenka said. "I'm super excited to go out there and to fight and to do everything I need to get the win."

Sabalenka shone on big points

Sabalenka overcame a shaky start and windy conditions to prevail against Zheng 7-6 (3), 6-3 and extend her record against the Chinese star to 7-1.

The score did not fully reflect the closeness of the quarterfinal, though, with so little separating the rivals. But Sabalenka demonstrated why she was No. 1, making the difference on big points, while Zheng struggled with her serve in tense moments.

Sabalenka had lost her most recent match against Zheng last month in Rome, having previously dominated their first six encounters. She said that loss was a good thing in the middle of an already exhausting season.

"I was actually glad I lost that match, because I needed a little break before Roland-Garros," Sabalenka said. "Today, I was just more fresh. I was ready to battle; I was ready to leave everything I had on court to get this win."

Sabalenka, a three-time major champion, has yet to drop a set in Paris.

Zheng started strong on Court Philippe-Chatrier, breaking early and dominating with aggressive play.

However, two double faults in the eighth game allowed Sabalenka to break back and shift the momentum.

A misjudged call by Zheng in the 12th game nearly cost her, but she fought off a set point to force a tiebreaker. Sabalenka remained more consistent and secured the set after Zheng hit long on a drop shot.

Zheng saved a break point with an overhead shot in the fifth game of the second set, but Sabalenka's powerful backhand return pinned her down on the next one, allowing the top-ranked player to move ahead 3--2. Zheng did not go down without a fight, though, and broke back immediately, only to drop her two last service games.

The loss ended a run of 10 consecutive match wins for Zheng at Roland-Garros, dating to last summer's Olympic Games.

Oft-injured Kyrgios won't play at Wimbledon

Nick Kyrgios will not play at Wimbledon after experiencing a "small setback" as he recovers from a knee injury.

"I've hit a small setback in my recovery and unfortunately won't make it back for grass season this year," Kyrgios posted on social media Tuesday. "I know how much you've been looking forward to seeing me out there and I'm genuinely sorry to disappoint. This is just a bump in the road though and I'm already working hard to get back stronger than ever."

The Wimbledon runner-up in 2022 to Novak Djokovic, Kyrgios has dealt with knee and wrist injuries requiring surgery over the past two years.

Kyrgios, 30, is 1-4 in singles matches this year, last playing in mid-March at the Miami Open where he lost in the first round, 7-6 (3), 6-0, to Karen Khachanov of Russia.

Earlier in March, he retired from his BNP Paribas Open first-round match against the Netherlands' Botic van de Zandschulp. He also suffered a first-round loss at his home country's Australian Open in January.

With files from Samuel Petrequin, Associated Press & Field Level Media

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