THE FRENCH OPEN
Roland Garros Women’s Day 7

Unstoppable defending champion Iga Swiatek turned in her second double-bagel victory in three weeks as the world No. 1 roared into the fourth round of the French Open on Saturday.
Swiatek crushed China’s Wang Xinyu, the WTA No. 80, with a 6-0, 6-0 scoreline.
The rout took just 51 minutes and duplicated a similar May result in Rome over Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova in the second round.
.”I was very disciplined and took care of everything,” Swiatek said. “I’m pretty happy with my performance.”
Swiatek has dropped just eight games over three matches this week and stands 24-2 on the season.
Wang lost for the third time to a Top 10 player.
Swiatek took another step towards holding onto her top ranking; she will need to win the next round and earn the quarter-finals to have a chance of holding off Aryna Sabalenka, the second seed and challenger to her Tour superiority.
“Every point is important for me,” Swiatek said. “At the highest level, every point matters.
“I’m pleased with the way I kept my focus throughout the whole match. I’m keep feeling better and better every day.
“That’s what I wanted to achieve in this tournament. I’m glad I feel the rhythm a little bit better in every match.”.
American teenager Coco Gauff ran into the rare opponent younger than herself as she defeated rising 16-year-old Mirra Andreeva 6-7 (5), 6-1, 6-1.
The winner, aged 19, lost the final here a year ago to Iga Swiatek. Gauff recovered after dropping the first set against Andreeva to run out the winner in a shade over two hours.
Wild card Andreeva had qualified into the first Grand Slam main draw of her career.
“She’s super-young and has a big future,” the winner said, revealing that she and her opponent played practice sets earlier this week at Roland Garros.
“I remember playing here at 16, she has a lot to look forward to.”
Gauff said she had to lift her level to take out the win.
“I had chances in the first set, I served for it but we traded breaks. I was a bit undisciplined in the tiebreaker.
“I knew this would not be an easy match, but it’s all about adjustment in tennis.”
The Floridian’s win began repairing her poor record when losing an opening – which stood 2-16 before the match.
Andreeva learned from her mistakes after winning the opening set.
“It was a tough match for me, but I will take positive things and I will learn from it. I will just keep going.
“I didn’t expect like to win or to lose. I was just playing how the game goes.
After I won the first set , realised that I can really win this match. Then I got a little bit nervous not to lose this opportunity – that was a mistake from me.
“I should have just continued playing, and that’s it.”
Slovak Anna Schmiedlova ended the breakout run of US qualifier Kayla Day 6-1, 6-3.
Both players set personal records, with Schmiedlova reaching the second week of a Slam for the first time and Day notching her first career Tour-level main draw wins on clay.
Former US Open champion Bianca Andreescu, whose career has stalled after her 2019 Grand Slam surprise, was bundled out 6-1, 6-1 by Lesia Tsurenko of Ukraine.
The Canadian lasted for 63 minutes, committing 20 unforced errors and losing serve six times.
Main photo:- Roland Garros 2023 Day 7 Iga Swiatek wins third round match by Roger Parker International Sports Fotos Ltd
ATP
France’s Forget comes to the defence of Sinner

Former French tournament director Guy Forget has rallied to the defence of Jannik Sinner, saying any retroactive banning of the world No. 1 after being cleared of guilt for inadvertent doping would be “an absolute tragedy.”
The ex-player and Roland Garros TD told Tennis Actu of his worries as the Italian faces a challenge to his clearance by anti-doping bosses for microscopic amounts on a prohibited substance contained in a cream used by his former masseur.
“I have the impression that such a level of technology has been reached in testing that it is possible to trace a grain of sugar in an Olympic swimming pool,” Forget said.
Sinner will await a February decision on the protest of his no-fault sentence by anti-doping body WADA, with a possible two-year ban the worst-case scenario for the hottest player of this past season.
“All players take food supplements and vitamins: products that could contain traces of risky substances. So, even without knowing it, they end up testing positive,” Forget said..
“When this happens, it is an absolute tragedy for the innocent. I am not talking about the guilty and repeat offenders.
“I put myself in the shoes of an athlete who tested positive for a substance present in infinitesimal quantities.
“We can tell ourselves that we are preventing ourselves from living our passion, finding ourselves in such a situation despite never having cheated: it is terrible.
“I see it a bit like this for Halep, Swiatek and Sinner. The problem is that there cannot be a two-level solution.
“he warned: “We cannot think of suspending one player for a year and the other for three weeks.
“It is a double standard that would be an injustice and a problem.
“I do not doubt Sinner’s good faith, unlike what I have done in other cases. If Sinner were to receive a retroactive sanction, it will be tough for him”.
ATP
Tsitsipas takes aim at ATP’s two-week Masters debacle

Stefanos Tsitsipas has joined the growing chorus of complaints as the ATP charges ahead with the controversial doubling of the Masters 1000 tournament length from one week to two.
The hot-topic change is due to be completed in 2025 despite criticism coming from all corners of the tennis universe.
The Greek whose season ended at last week’s Paris Masters – the last of the classic one-week events – has lashed out at what he called a “backwards step” by tennis bosses whose client tourneys can reap more money by adding more days of play.
On the Grand Slam stage, both the French and Australian Opens start on a Sunday, extending those to majors to a gruelling 15 days.
But it’s the Masters plan which is drawing fire from the player side of the sport.
Former No. 1 Andy Roddick, who hosts an influential podcast,” has labelled the expansion as “stupid.”
Tsitsipas echoes that harsh sentiment: “The two-week Masters 1000s have turned into a drag, the quality has definitely dropped.
“Players aren’t getting the recovery or training time they need, with constant matches and no space for the intense work off the court.”
Already, the Indian Wells, Miami, Madrid and Rome Masters were played at two weeks this season, with Canada and Cincinnati expected to follow the ATP diktat next August and expand as well.
“If the goal was to ease the calendar, extending every 1000 to two weeks is a backwards move. Sometimes, it feels like they’re fixing what wasn’t broken,” Tsitsipas posted on social media.
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