Zverev beats Tabilo and reaches the Rome final

As of: May 17, 2024 11:46 p.m

Alexander Zverev continued his winning streak at the ATP tournament in Rome and made it to the final after a very good fighting performance. The third-seeded Hamburger prevailed on Friday (May 17, 2024) thanks to a significant increase in performance against the Chilean Alejandro Tabilo 1:6, 7:6 (7:4), 6:2.

This means that the German Olympic tennis champion is only one step away from his first tournament victory this year – and apparently in Grand Slam form a week and a half before the start of the French Open. Zverev will face Tabilo’s compatriot Nicolas Jarry in the final on Sunday. Jarry beat Tommy Paul (USA) 6:3, 6:7 and 6:3 in a thrilling match late on Friday evening. Jarry missed four match points, had to fend off two break points, but then got through the fifth match point.

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Zverev’s last tournament victory to date dates back to last September, when he celebrated his 21st title on the tour in Chengdu, China. The fifth in the world rankings last won a Masters in 2021; he triumphed for the first and only time in Rome in 2017. For the third time he is in the final in the Eternal City, for the eleventh time at Masters level – as many times as Boris Becker.

“He has the first sentence (Tabilo, d. Red.) played much better. He took the bat out of my hand. I’m glad that I just started with the score in the third set,” said Zverev on the “Sky” microphone, “it’s a match where you can actually only lose. It’s not easy mentally. But I’ve been in situations like this many times, I know what to do.” Zverev is confident about the final: “If I play my game, I know that I have a good chance.”

Zverev was only dominant from the second round onwards

Against Tabilo, number 32 in the ATP ranking, Zverev was in a losing position in the first set and had to give up the round after just 32 minutes. In the second set, nine days before the start of the French Open, Germany’s number one finally found his dominant baseline game, but the first duel with the left-hander Tabilo, who was a year younger, remained close. Zverev stayed cool in the tiebreak and celebrated winning the set like winning a match.

In the third set he left no doubt about his success and celebrated his entry into the final with a long shout of joy. The path to triumph in Rome seems to have been paved for Zverev.

Djokovic and Medvedev were out early, Sinner and Alcaraz sat out

The world number one Novak Djokovic and the number two seed, the Russian Daniil Medvedev, were eliminated early. Local hero Jannik Sinner skipped the start in Rome due to complaints, as did the Spaniard Carlos Alcaraz.

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