• French Open

Nadal eases to 31st straight French Open win

ESPN staff
May 31, 2014
Rafael Nadal has only lost one match at the French Open © AP
Enlarge

For the second time in his unparalleled French Open career, Rafael Nadal owns a 31-match winning streak at the clay-court grand slam tournament.

Now he'll try to get to 32 for the first time.

The eight-time champion at Roland Garros equalled his longest run at Roland Garros with a 6-2 7-5 6-2 victory over Leonardo Mayer in the third round on Saturday.

Afterward, Nadal thanked the Court Philippe Chatrier crowd in French for supporting him and told them "a lot of memories come through my mind" whenever he plays in that stadium.

The last time Nadal won 31 in a row in Paris, he failed to get No.32, losing in the fourth round in 2009 to Robin Soderling. That remains Nadal's only defeat in 63 matches at the tournament.

He has dropped only 19 games this year, heading into a match against Dusan Lajovic, the world No.83 of Serbia, who is in only the second grand slam tournament of his career and beat Jack Sock of the United States 6-4 7-5 6-3.

Nadal made only 10 unforced errors against Mayer - two in the first set, three in the second and five in the third. Still, there were moments when the match was far closer than the final score indicates, including when Mayer was serving at five-all, deuce, in the second set.

After Mayer's forehand sailed long to set up a break point, Nadal converted it by stretching to scoop a backhand lob. As Mayer watched the shot sail overhead, he waved his left hand to signal to the ball to go out, then rolled his eyes when it curled in. At the other end, Nadal pumped his fist, ahead 6-5 in that set and well on his way to reaching the fourth round for the 10th time in trips to Roland Garros. Roger Federer, who won his third-round match on Friday, is the only other man to make it to the final 16 in Paris that many years in a row.

Lajovic saved eight of nine break points he faced against the Sock, who has yet to reach the final 16 at a major.

Before this French Open, Lajovic had a 10-21 career record in tour-level matches, never winning two in a row.

David Ferrer, the fifth seed who lost to Nadal in last year's final, got to the fourth round by defeating Andreas Seppi 6-2 7-6(2) 6-3.

Ferrer improved to 7-0 against Seppi, winning all 15 sets they've played. Ferrer, who has lost a total of 26 games through three matches this year in Paris, will face Kevin Anderson for a place in the quarter-finals.

Anderson progressed when Ivo Karlovic retired after one set on Saturday because of a bad back.

© ESPN Sports Media Ltd
ESPN staff Close