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Djokovic Leads Been-There Crew at French

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Djokovic Leads Been-There Crew at French

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Serbia’s Novak Djokovic plays a shot against Colombia’s Daniel Elahi Galan in the third round match of the French Open tennis tournament at the Roland Garros stadium in Paris, France, Saturday, Oct. 3, 2020. (AP Photo/Christophe Ena)

PARIS (AP) — Surprising results and “Who is that?” stories abound as this one-of-these-is-not-like-the-others French Open heads to the fourth round — with the wild-card entry, the pair of qualifiers and the group of men and women who keep advancing in their tournament debuts.

And then there are the known quantities still around, the been-there-done-that crew, led by No. 1-seeded Novak Djokovic, who reached the round of 16 for the 11th consecutive year, equaling a record held by his Big Three rivals, Rafael Nadal and Roger Federer.

Forget the idea of an early upset or even slightest upstaging of Djokovic. He is outclassing opponents and making every contest uncompetitive, yet again ceding merely five games — as he has each time out so far on this trip to Roland Garros — in a 6-0, 6-3, 6-2 victory Saturday over 153rd-ranked Daniel Elahi Galan.

“If you impose yourself from the very beginning on the court, which I have in those first three matches here,” said Djokovic, who is 34-1 in 2020 as he bids for a second French Open championship and 18th Grand Slam title in all, “then it makes it hard for them to really believe that they can come back and make a turnaround in the match.”

Galan confirmed as much.

“Of course he’s superior (to) me, but you also feel like you have to make everything perfect or you will lose zero, zero and zero,” Galan said. “And I was (down 6-0, 2-0), and I was worried about it.”

Djokovic was concerned, truly, by just one matter: the rain that was falling.

As he said to chair umpire Jaume Campistol, “What is the reason for not closing the roof if we have it?”

Seems reasonable.

Didn’t seem to affect Djokovic’s play, though.

The drop shot and lob combinations were working well. The reflex returns of 125 mph (200 kph) would-be aces were impeccable.

And those forehands?

“It was like a rocket. Every forehand,” said Galan, who called that stroke far more impressive in person than on TV. “I was not able to even react.”

Eventually, but only after Galan slipped behind the baseline while trying to change directions and Djokovic checked on him, play was paused and the $55 million retractable cover was shut.

Djokovic kidded around with the grounds crew, even grabbing a broom to help sweep the lines before action resumed.

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