Tennis-Teenager Jodar storms into Madrid quarters to set up Sinner showdown


MADRID, April 28 (Reuters) - Rafa ⁠Jodar thrilled his home crowd at the Caja Magica on Tuesday with a commanding 7-5 ⁠6-0 win over Czech Vit Kopriva, earning a quarter-final showdown with world number one ‌Jannik Sinner.

The 19-year-old clay specialist, fresh from a three-set victory over 27th seed Joao Fonseca on Sunday, produced another assured display against the 28-year-old Kopriva, ranked 66th in the world, under Madrid's fierce mid-afternoon sun.

Tall and lean, Jodar traded heavy groundstrokes from ​the baseline with his quick-footed opponent in a tightly contested ⁠opening set. At 3-3, Kopriva carved out ⁠two break points in the seventh game, but Jodar held firm to nudge ahead 4-3.

With the set ⁠poised ‌at 6-5 to Jodar and a tiebreak looming, the Spaniard raised the intensity. He surged to 0-40 on Kopriva's serve and broke decisively to seal the set 7-5, drawing roars ⁠from the stands.

The second set was one-way traffic.

Jodar held to open ​and, after seeing three break ‌points saved in Kopriva's first service game of the set, made the fourth count before ⁠moving 3-0 in ​front. Brimming with confidence, he dictated play with authority and soon benefited from a double fault on break point to stretch his lead to 5-0.

There was no let-up. Jodar broke again to complete a flawless 6-0 set, wrapping ⁠up victory in emphatic fashion and booking a mouth-watering meeting ​with Sinner on Wednesday.

The Italian is chasing a fifth consecutive Masters 1000 title and his first in Madrid, adding extra intrigue to a clash between the established world number one and the tournament's emerging home ⁠favourite.

Jodar has enjoyed a meteoric rise, climbing from outside the top 900 to world number 42 in a year, winning his first ATP title in Marrakech this month and reaching the third round in Miami in March to establish himself as one of tennis’s most promising young talents.

"Every match in a tournament ​like this is tough and can get complicated, so you always ⁠have to keep the same mindset. That's what I did in the first set: I dug deep, played ​my best tennis, and I'm really happy with the win," ‌said Jodar.

"It's going to be a great match (against Sinner) ​and I hope the crowd turns out in force to cheer me on and support me because it's going to be a cracking match."

(Reporting by Fernando KallasEditing by Toby Davis)

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