Djokovic chasing Federer win record
‘There is always that kind of conviction and belief inside of me that I can win a Slam. That’s the reason why I’m still competing at this level.’
‘There is always that kind of conviction and belief inside of me that I can win a Slam. That’s the reason why I’m still competing at this level.’

Bogo City’s Etha Nadine Seno stamped her class with a pair of commanding victories to sweep the girls’ 14U and 16U…

Sinner survives Zverev, defends Wimby title

Jannik Sinner reinforced his status as the world's top-ranked player after successfully defending his Wimbledon title,…
Eala makes Phl return ahead of North American swing

LONDON, United Kingdom (AFP) — Linda Noskova won her first Wimbledon title in astonishing style on Saturday as the…

NOVAK Djokovic
DIMITAR DILKOFF/agence france-presse
What's your take?
Google Preferred Sources
Get more Daily Tribune stories in your search results
Add Daily Tribune as a preferred source on Google Search.
Continue reading
PARIS, France (AFP) — Novak Djokovic can match Roger Federer’s record for Grand Slam match wins by beating Lorenzo Musetti at the French Open on Saturday.
Defending champion Djokovic, chasing a fourth title at Roland Garros and 25th career major, will go level with the retired Federer on 369 victories at the Slams if he sees off the Italian 30th seed and makes the Last 16.
Djokovic has defeated Musetti four times in five meetings.
The Italian, however, gave the Serbian a major scare at the French Open in 2021 when he won the first two sets of their fourth round clash before retiring injured in the decider.
“There is always that kind of conviction and belief inside of me that I can win a Slam. That’s the reason why I’m still competing at this level,” the 37-year-old Djokovic said.
Djokovic arrived in Paris under a cloud having not won a title or even reached a final in the season for the first time since 2018.
Adding injury to insult, he was accidentally hit on the head by a metal water bottle in Rome before suffering stomach problems in Geneva.
But he hasn’t dropped a set in two matches and cracked an impressive 43 winners past Spain’s 63rd-ranked Roberto Carballes Baena on Thursday, dropping just seven games.
German fourth seed Alexander Zverev, who has made the semi-finals in each of the last three years, started this French Open by likely ending the Roland Garros career of 14-time champion Rafael Nadal.
“Since the draw came out, the only thing the tennis world was talking about was that match,” Zverev said.
“He won the tournament 14 times, so he deserves all the credit and respect and all the acknowledgements he gets. So after I beat him I felt that I had already won the tournament, but in the end it was only the first round.”
Zverev tackles Dutch 26th seed Tallon Griekspoor and has shown no indication of being distracted by the start in Berlin of a trial against him over allegations of assaulting an ex-girlfriend.
Casper Ruud, the runner-up to Nadal and then Djokovic in the last two seasons, needed five sets to see off Spain’s Alejandro Davidovich Fokina in the second round.
The seventh-seeded Norwegian faces Argentina’s Tomas Martin Etcheverry who made the third round when his French opponent Arthur Rinderknech retired with a foot injury caused by kicking out in frustration at an advertising hoarding.