The Oklahoman

Djokovic advances to meet Nadal in French Open finals

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NovakDjoko vic seemed well on his way to yet another ho-hum victory, yet another French Open final, yet another matchup against rival Rafael Nadal. And then, suddenly, what had been a gallop became a grind.

Slightly more than two hours into his semifinal against Stefanos Tsitsipas on Friday night, Djokovic was serving for the match, one point from ending things in straight sets. Just. One. Point. But a downthe-line backhand veered a tad wide, Djokovic rolled his eyes and, eventually, he was stuck in a serious situation, somehow pushed to five sets.

As is usually the case, though, he was up to the task when it mattered the most. Djokovic got back in gear down the stretch to hold off the much younger, much less accomplish­ed Tsitsipas 6-3, 6-2, 5-7, 4-6, 6-1 to reach his fifth title match in Paris.

Standing in the way of No. 1 Djokovic, a 33-year-old from Serbia, on Sunday at Court Philippe Chatier — he is pursuing a second trophy there and 18th from all Grand Slam tournament­s — will be, as it's been so often, No. 2 Nadal, a 34-yearold from Spain.

It will be their 56th meeting, a record between two men in the profession­al era (Djokovic leads 29-26), 16th at a major (Nadal leads 9-6) and eighth at Roland Garros (Nadal leads 6-1).

In addition to closing in on an unfathomab­le 13th French Open championsh­ip with a 6-3, 6-3, 7-6 (0) win Friday over 12thseeded Diego Schwartzma­n, Nadal now gets a chance to tie Roger Federer for the men's record of 20 Slam titles.

In the women's final Saturday, Sofia Kenin of the U.S. faces 19-year-old Iga Swiatek of Poland.

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