Carlos Alcaraz produced his best display of the tournament to line up a quarter-final rematch with Stefanos Tsitsipas at the French Open, while Iga Swiatek ramped up her bid for a third successive Roland Garros title with a 40-minute blitz on Sunday.
Alcaraz says he feels much more like himself in Paris after an injury-hit build-up saw him sidelined by a sore forearm for almost a month.
His 6-3, 6-3, 6-1 win over Canadian 21st seed Auger-Aliassime suggested he is rounding into top form, sending an ominous signal to his rivals as he made the last eight for the third year in succession.
The Spaniard pumped 34 winners past Auger-Aliassime as the persistent rain which heavily disrupted the first week of the tournament finally relented, allowing matches on the two main courts to go ahead without the need for their retractable roofs.
“I’m really happy with my performance. I think I played a really high level of tennis,” said Alcaraz, beaten by eventual champion Novak Djokovic in the semi-finals last year.
“The most important thing is to believe in myself. It doesn’t matter that I don’t have too many matches on my back and that I didn’t come with a lot of rhythm.”
“My game is getting better and better,” he added. “My confidence is getting higher. Every practice that I’m doing or every day that I’m here in Roland Garros, I’m feeling better and better.”
Alcaraz moves on to play Tsitsipas after the 2021 Roland Garros runner-up fended off Italy’s Matteo Arnaldi 3-6, 7-6 (7/4), 6-2, 6-2, the turning point coming in the second set when he saved four set points.
“It was one of the craziest comebacks I’ve had,” said ninth seed Tsitsipas. “That game when I broke (down 5-3 in the second set) was the biggest pleasure I’ve experienced in tennis for a long time.”
Alcaraz boasts a 5-0 career head-to-head record over Tsitsipas with three wins on clay, including a straight-sets victory in the French Open quarter-finals a year ago.
“He has said in the past he likes playing against me, so I hope he gets to like it a little bit less this time,” said Tsitsipas.
Second seed Jannik Sinner has yet to drop a set through three rounds and takes on the last remaining Frenchman in the draw, Corentin Moutet, in the night session.
Australian Open champion Sinner has lost only two matches this year and will replace Djokovic as world number one if he reaches the final.
Sinner withdrew from Madrid with a hip problem and then skipped Rome, a precaution which appears to be paying off.
“I feel good. The hip at the moment feels good,” he said. “Me and my team, we made a very good job to be in the position to play here.”
Earlier in the day, women’s world number one Swiatek demolished Russia’s Anastasia Potapova 6-0, 6-0, dropping only 10 points in the shortest completed match of her career.
“I was really focused and in the zone. I wasn’t looking at the score so I continued working on my game,” said Swiatek.
“It went pretty quickly... pretty weird.”
The Pole’s brisk victory came on the same Court Philippe Chatrier where Djokovic had completed his third round win at 3:07am, the latest finish to a French Open match after more than four hours and five sets.
Swiatek, who saved a match point against Naomi Osaka in the second round, is a red-hot favourite to lift the Coupe Suzanne Lenglen and become only the fourth woman to win four Roland Garros titles in the Open era.
She next plays Wimbledon champion Marketa Vondrousova, the fifth seed who ended the run of Serbian qualifier Olga Danilovic in straight sets.
US Open champion Coco Gauff made light work of Elisabetta Cocciaretto, sweeping past the world number 51 from Italy 6-1, 6-2.
Cocciaretto had taken down two seeds to reach the last 16 of a major for the first time but was no match for third seed Gauff, the 2022 French Open runner-up.
The American advances to a quarter-final with three-time Grand Slam finalist Ons Jabeur, who beat Denmark’s Clara Tauson 6-4, 6-4.
World number nine Jabeur broke the 72nd-ranked Tauson’s service in a tight third game and nearly dropped her own right afterwards in a marathon 26-point game but held firm and went on to clinch the first set.
With a superb passing shot, the 29-year-old Tunisian immediately took the lead in the second set but could not hold it and had to wait until the fifth game to break again as Tauson hit two mistimed unforced errors.
Tauson, who defeated 2017 Roland Garros champion Jelena Ostapenko in the second round and former runner-up Sofia Kenin in the third, nearly drew level in the 10th game but Jabeur kept the upper hand to wrap up victory in little over an hour and a half.
Jabeur waved her arms and bounced up and down while singing along with fans during her post-match interview on court, later saying that the song was a mix of Arabic, French and Italian that she loosely translated as “it’s incredible, step by step to the final”.
Jabeur, targeting a first Grand Slam title after finishing runner-up twice at Wimbledon and at the US Open last year, will face world number three Gauff in the quarter-finals.
“It’s going to be difficult. She’s such a fighter,” Jabeur said of the American. “I know I can bother her also but it’s going to be a great match.”
Sports
Alcaraz books quarter-final rematch with Tsitsipas
Swiatek demolishes Potapova in 40 minutes to reach quarter-finals, Jabeur ends Tauson’s run
Spain’s Carlos Alcaraz Garfia plays a backhand return to Canada’s Felix Auger-Aliassime during their match on day eight of the French Open at the Roland Garros Complex in Paris on Sunday. (AFP)
Poland’s Iga Swiatek celebrates after winning her match against Russia’s Anastasia Potapova in Paris on Sunday. (AFP)