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Rome – It was probably the Pope’s blessing. Or maybe Janic Cinema just likes to play against Caspar Rud.
Whatever the case, the top cinema cranks perfectly at the nearby time, after breaking the Rudd in the 6-1 Italian Open Quarter Final, after the audience granted the audience with the new tennis-pope pope just below the Vatican.
Returning to his fourth match after a three-month doping ban, blasting the winners in the cinema line, ending points with aggressive overhead, and never really the best clay player of Rodke-Tour will never get one chance.
The Seventh Ranned Roud Madrid Open was named in the Open, but he won only seven points in the first set. Norwegian came down to 0-4 in his career against Cinear-and never even released Italian.
However, Sinar did not leave the set in four matches in Rome – not bad for Sinar’s first tournament since winning the third Grand Slam title in the Australian Open in January.
When Rud finally won a game early in the second set, he celebrated both weapons near the crowd and smiled. The match lasted 63 minutes.
Sinar’s winning series extended 25 matches from October to October.
In February, Sinar agreed with a compromise with the World Anti-Doping Agency that raised some questions, since the three-month suspension did not conveniently miss any grand slam and return to his home tournament.
Rome is the latest big clay-court wormup before the French Open begins on May 25.
Sinar 1 is trying to become the first Italian man who earns the title of Rome from Adriano Panta in 1976.
In the semifinals, Cinema will play the role of Tommy Paul, who defeated Hubert Hurkakz 7-6 (4), 6-3 and will be the fourth American to reach the back-to-back semifinal in Rome after AD Dibs (1978-79), Jim Courier (1992-93) and 1993-94).
Paul also defeated Hurkakz in the quarterfinals last year but Nicholas Jari was defeated in the semifinals.
Sinar’s victory host gives Italy the last four players, since the Lorenzo Misty will face Carlos Alcaraj in another semifinal.
Another Italian Jasmine Paulini fell to the women’s final.
Paulini saved three set points before gaining control against the American opponent Piton Sterns -5-6, and the first Italian woman became the first Italian woman to win the 20 -championship match to her doubles partner, Saran Irani, Serena Williams.
“We have a great movement and I am really honored to be a part of it,” Paulini said.
The last Italian woman to win the Italian Open was Rafaella Regi, who took the title in Taranto in 1985.
In the final, the fifth -ranked Paulini will face Coco Guff or Zheng Kinwin, who was playing later.
Paulini and Irani also advanced to the doubles semifinals. The pair won gold at the Paris Olympics last year, when Paulini reached the French Open and Wimbledon in a single final.