ATP
Djokovic drops Korda in delayed Miami win

Novak Djokovic made up for lost time as the surging Serb stopped Sebastian Korda 6-3, 7-6 (4) on Thursday to make a delayed appearance in the semi-finals of the MIami Masters.
The quarter-finals had been scheduled for the day before but was caught out by wet Florida weather and postponed.
The 37-year-old Djoovic is now two wins away from winning his 100th career Tour title and would join the 1000 club alongside Jimmy Connors and Roger Federer should he obtain another personal record here on Sunday.
He moved into a semi with good friend and longtime rival Grigor Dimitrov.
Djokovic will be playing his 79th Masters 1000 semi and his eighth here after advancing in 91 minutes over Korda; he has not stopped a set so far.
The 24-time Grand Slam champion said his serving saw him through in a tough second set fightback.
“I feel as good as possible about my serving today. I really needed it in the second set. He was making me run and playing well from the back of the court,” Djokovic said.
“He didn’t have so many errors like in the first. It took good serving to get myself out of trouble.”
The six-time tournament winner raced through the opening set in less than half an hour, sweeping the last 12 points to claim it on the first of three set points.
The one-way traffic was halted in the second, with Korda breaking but losing that edge as Djokovic got it back to trail 5-4 after falling to 2-5.
Djokovic denied Korda in the 12th game of the set as the American stood two point from levelling the sets,
Djokovic ran away with the second-set tiebreaker and sealed victory with his 11th ace.
Main photo:- Novak Djokovic celebrates in Miami – by ISF Ltd
ATP
Tsitsipas quits Barca match with illness

Arthur Fils spent just 20 minutes on court before advancing to the semi-finals in Barcelona on Friday as opponent Stefanos Tsitsipas quit their quarter-final with apparent illness.
The rising Frenchman collected a 2-0 win as the four-time runner-up walked to the net midway through the third game, unable to continue.
Fills will take on two-time champion Carlos Alcaraz for a place in the title match.
The pair played only last week in Monte Carlos, with Alcaraz posting a comeback quarter-final win.
“I think Stef has a bug, but I’m not sure,” Fils said. “I was ready to battle for a few hours, we always have tough matches.
“I hope he will be ready for the next weeks and Roland Garros.”
The No. 14 said he is pleased with the state of his own game: “I’m playing great, the match in Monte Carlo against Carlitos was positive even if I lost.”
Main photo; Arthus Fils in action -by ISF Ltd
ATP
Alcaraz fights through early niggles in Barcelona

Carlos Alcaraz fought off serving problems early on to dismiss the upset plans of Alex de Minaur, with the Spanish top seed reaching the Barcelona Open semi-finals 7-5, 6-4.
Last weekend’s Monte Carlo champion moved to within a pair of wins of a repeat in the chase for a third title at the home clay event.
Alcaraz twice trailed by a break in the opening set against his Australian opponent who learned his clay tennis in Spain.
But the local fought from 1-3 down to finally take the set on his second opportunity before whipping his game into shape for a sprint to the finish as he dominated to close out a third straight-set win of the week.
Two time Barca winner Alcaraz has now won his last right clay matches to reach the 36th semi-final of his career.
“It was really tight in the first set, I’m glad I ended up winning it.” he said. “In the second I played well the entire time.
“I started quite badly with serve in the first few games. But I calmed myself down and improved that.
“I started thinking positive and kept going to find my good tennis.”
Alcaraz leads the ATP with 23 clay victories this season – one more than seventh seed de Minaur.
Main photo:- Carlos Alcaraz winning in Barcelona – by Banc Sabadell Trofeo
ATP
Rune returns to top 10 after defeat of Ruud

Holger Rune upset Barcelona Open holder Casper Ruud 6-4, 6-2, with the Dane set for a return to a top 10 ranking after winning Friday’s Scandinavian showdown.
Rune dominated his Norwegian rival in the 87 minute quarter-final, with Ruud now set to slide from the ranking elite from his 10th position as a result of the loss.
Victory marked a turning point for Rune, who stood 1-6 against a rival with three Grand Slam finals – two at Roland Garros – to his credit.
Rune clinched victory with his 16th winner after an exhausting duel on match point, which he won with a forehand down the line.
Ruud looked to be well off his usual clay game, committing 29 unforced errors including three double-faults.
“I’m proud of myself, I was hitting through my shots and I played explosively,” the winner said. “Casper is a great player and he made it difficult.
“Despite all the (Scandinavian) hype, I tried to look at it as just another match. I
I’m very happy I beat him today.”
Rune will challenge for the finals in the Catalan capital in a Saturday match against Karen Khachanov, who defeated Monte Carlo semi-finalist Alejandro Davidovich Fokina 6-4, 7-5.
Rune won his sixth Tour quarter-final since last August and earned his first top 10 win on clay since defeating No. 9 Grigor Dimitrov at Monte Carlo in 2024.
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