20 August,2023 08:26 AM IST | Cincinnati | mid-day online correspondent
Novak Djokovic and Carlos Alcaraz
Novak Djokovic got the better of Taylor Fritz, while Wimbledon champion Carlos Alcaraz had to push hard to get past Max Purcell on Friday as the top two seeds reached the semi-finals at the ATP/WTA Cincinnati Open.
Tournament No. 2 Djokovic showed no mercy against Fritz, hammering the top American 6-0, 6-4 to improve to 7-0 against him.
Also Read: Novak Djokovic bags first win in US return in Cincinnati Open
World No. 1 Alcaraz rallied to hold off Australian qualifier Purcell 4-6, 6-3, 6-4. "I managed to get out of the blocks with a flawless start. I'm feeling better on court. I hope the same trajectory can continue," added Djokovic, who next faces German Alexander Zverev.
ALSO READ
Djokovic vs Alcaraz? Australian Open draw sets up possible quarterfinal showdown
Kyrgios’ Grand Slam return in doubt due to abdominal injury
Know the reason why Novak Djokovic feels trauma in Australia
Novak Djokovic beaten by big-serving Reilly Opelka in quarterfinals of Brisbane International
Djoko loses, Sabalenka wins at Brisbane International
Meanwhile, Djokovic had a short night in his first singles match in the U.S. since 2021, beating Alejandro Davidovich Fokina on Wednesday in the Western and Southern Open after the Spaniard retired early in the second set with a lower back injury.
The second-ranked Djokovic won the first set 6-4, then two points into the second set, Davidovich Fokina hunched over in pain following his return and ended the match after 46 minutes. "Kind of a mixed emotions tonight," Djokovic said. "Really like Alejandro. Get along really well off the court. We train with each other while in Spain. He told me he has a lower back issue that appeared yesterday. It's unfortunate."
Djokovic, 36, lost in doubles on Tuesday in his return to the country after missing events because of COVID-19 vaccine restrictions. It's his first appearance in Cincinnati since 2019. The 2020 Western & Southern Open was played in New York due to COVID-19.
(With agency inputs)