Ruthless Murray keeps heat on Djokovic in Paris
PARIS, France (AFP) — Andy Murray stepped up his assault on Novak Djokovic’s world number one ranking by thrashing Lucas Pouille to ease into the quarter-finals of the Paris Masters yesterday.
Murray reeled off the final eight games as he dispatched French 13th seed Pouille 6-3, 6-0 to extend his winning streak to 17 matches.
Murray, runner-up in Paris last year, will meet Tomas Berdych or Gilles Simon next as he bids to end long-time rival Djokovic’s 122-week run at the top of the rankings.
The Scot has won three straight tournaments — in Beijing, Shanghai and Vienna — to drastically close the gap on Djokovic and must at least reach the final in Paris to stand a chance of displacing the Serb.
Djokovic recovered from an early wobble to defeat Grigor Dimitrov 4-6, 6-2, 6-3 as he tries to keep Murray at arm’s length.
The record four-time champion will remain above Murray at the top of the rankings if he makes Sunday’s final in the French capital, but Djokovic was made to sweat by the Bulgarian.
He fell behind after losing serve twice in succession in an hour-long first set and then required medical treatment on his right knee after landing awkwardly while stretching for a return.
But Djokovic kept his calm as the errors mounted from Dimitrov to claim the second set with relative ease, and he broke early in the decider to wrest away control of the match.
The top seed next takes on Marin Cilic, who earlier punched his ticket to the Tour finals in London with a 6-3, 7/6 (11/9) defeat of David Goffin.
Cilic claimed the penultimate spot in the eight-man field for the prestigious November 13-20 event in London after seeing off Goffin on his sixth match point.
Fourth seed Milos Raonic shook off a slow start against Uruguay’s Pablo Cuevas to advance 4-6, 6-1, 6-2 and set up a quarter-final showdown with Kei Nishikori or 2008 champion Jo-Wilfried Tsonga.
American Jack Sock matched last month’s run to the last eight in Shanghai as he dumped out home hope Richard Gasquet 6-2, 3-6, 7-5.
He will meet compatriot John Isner in the next round after the latter halted the run of German qualifier Jan-Lennard Struff, winning 6-4, 6-7 (4/7), 6-3.
Berdych, the 2005 titlist, plays Simon in the evening session with the Czech hoping to make the Tour finals for a seventh consecutive year.
The world number 11 trails Dominic Thiem, who lost in the second round, in the race for the remaining London berth and needs to reach at least the semis to leapfrog the Austrian.