PARIS, France (AFP) — World No. 1 Djokovic is the last of the top four seeds standing at the Paris Masters as he battled past unseeded Dutchman Tallon Griekspoor 4-6, 7-6 (7/2), 6-4, despite a stomach issue, on Thursday.
It was not the routine victory Djokovic enjoyed in his return to action a day earlier against Tomas Etcheverry, as he recovered from a set down to eventually win in two hours 39 minutes.
“I started off well but I ran out of steam. I’ve been struggling the last couple of days with my stomach and I just didn’t feel myself at all,” said Djokovic after the match.
“It’s hard to have a clear mind when you spent more time on the toilet than on court the last three days,” he added.
The Serb took an early break in the first set but surprisingly cracked at 4-2 as his opponent broke back and then went on to win four consecutive games to claim the opener 6-4.
The pair was inseparable in the second set as neither could force a break to gain the advantage, with the encounter rumbling inevitably towards a tiebreaker.
Djokovic showed his steel and composure to level the match with an imperious performance in the tiebreak, claiming it with minimal fuss.
The top seed’s experience was in evidence in the fifth game of the decider when he capitalized on some nervous serving from the Dutch 27-year-old to break.
But Griekspoor grittily kept his tournament hopes alive and was rewarded when he broke his opponent’s serve at 4-3, with Djokovic sarcastically applauding the Paris crowd afterwards.
This only fired up the Serb and he responded immediately, taking the very next game on the Dutchman’s serve to love, before sealing the match with his next service game.
The 36-year-old moves on to face Holger Rune in the quarter-finals on Friday, after the Danish sixth seed brushed aside German Daniel Altmaier 6-3, 6-3. Rune beat Djokovic in last year’s final in Paris.
Fourth seed Jannik Sinner withdrew before his third-round match, blaming a lack of recovery time after finishing his previous match after half-past two in the morning.
“I have to do what I believe is best for my health and body,” Sinner said.
The night before, the Italian started his match against American Mackenzie McDonald after midnight and battled to a three-set victory.
Sinner was due on center court on Thursday as the fourth match on the schedule to face Australian 13th seed Alex de Minaur.
Darren Cahill, who coaches Sinner, criticised what he called “zero care for players’ welfare with Paris scheduling.”
Casper Ruud, the eighth seed, who lost to Francisco Cerundulo on Wednesday, echoed the criticism.
“Bravo atptour way to help one of the best players in the world recover and be as ready as possible when he finished his previous match at 2:37 am this morning 14.5 hours to recover.. what a joke,” the Norwegian posted on X, formerly Twitter.
Sinner arrived in Paris from Vienna where he won the title on Sunday in a final against Daniil Medvedev that lasted more than three hours.
Stefanos Tsitsipas advanced to the quarter-finals and also locked up his place in the season-ending eight-man ATP Finals as he beat Alexander Zverev 7-6 (7/2), 6-4.
Tsitsipas became the sixth player officially qualified for the November 12-19 event in Turin after his first win this season in eight matches against top-10 players.
Zverev still holds the seventh spot in Turin but the two men immediately below him, Rune and Hubert Hurkacz are still going in Paris and could collect enough points from the tournament to overtake Zverev.