French Open 2018: Simona Halep wears the look of a favourite after crushing Elise Mertens to reach quarter-finals

Halep, who lost to Maria Sharapova and to Jelena Ostapenko in the 2014 and 2017 finals respectively, is doing her best not to feel any pressure as she chases her first Grand Slam title

Paul Newman
Roland Garros
Monday 04 June 2018 13:55 BST
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Simona Halep has twice been a runner-up in Paris
Simona Halep has twice been a runner-up in Paris (Getty Images)

Simona Halep says it feels good when people tell her that she is the favourite to win the French Open, but the world No 1 is taking nothing for granted. “It’s very far to think about the title,” Halep said after crushing Belgium’s Elise Mertens 6-2, 6-1 here on Monday to secure her place in the quarter-finals.

Twice a runner-up at Roland Garros, Halep took the last nine games on Court Philippe Chatrier against an opponent who had won two titles on clay in the build-up and had won 16 of her 17 matches in the current clay-court season. Her only previous defeat on clay this year had been against Halep in Madrid last month.

Mertens, aged 22, was making only her second appearance in the main draw here, having reached the third round last year. This was the first Grand Slam tournament where the Belgian had been seeded following her rapid rise up the world rankings, thanks in large part to her appearance in the Australian Open semi-finals in January.

Halep started slowly but took charge from the moment she broke in the third game. The 26-year-old Romanian played aggressively, going for her shots and winning her points in double-quick time.

“I wanted to be more aggressive, because tennis is like that now,” Halep said afterwards. “I don’t have that much power, but if I play fast I feel like I improve a little bit more in my game. That’s the plan.”

She added: “It was a great match, and the way I played gives me confidence that I did everything well until now. It’s never easy to play against her. I played her in Madrid and I felt that she was very aggressive. She wants to play fast, so I think today I did the same thing.I was a little bit stronger in the important moments.”

Simona Halep reaches a return (AFP/Getty Images)

Halep, who lost to Maria Sharapova and to Jelena Ostapenko here in the 2014 and 2017 finals respectively, is doing her best not to feel any pressure as she chases her first Grand Slam title.

“I’m thinking about winning a Grand Slam, but I don’t know if it’s going to happen this year or in this life,” she said with a smile. “I’m working for that. Every day I’m trying just to get better, tournament by tournament, year by year. I hope I will become mature enough to win a Grand Slam in the future, but for the moment I just want to enjoy this win and this tournament.”

However, Halep admitted that she always suffered with nerves before her matches. “That’s just the way I am,” she said. “I’m not going to fight with myself about that. But I’m trying to improve and to enjoy my nerves, because they are special when you play Grand Slams.”

In the quarter-finals Halep will meet Angelique Kerber, who ended France’s last hope of victory in either singles event when she beat Caroline Garcia 6-2, 6-3. Kerber has won the Australian and US Opens and finished runner-up at Wimbledon, but the 30-year-old German has never gone beyond the quarter-finals here.

Caroline Wozniacki, who beat Halep in the Romanian’s only other appearance in a Grand Slam final at this year’s Australian Open, suffered her customary Roland Garros disappointment when she was beaten 7-6, 6-3 by Russia’s Daria Kasatkina. In 11 appearances in the main draw here Wozniacki has never gone beyond the quarter-finals.

The match had been called off the previous night at 3-3 in the second set because of bad light and was over in a matter of minutes after the resumption as Kasatkina immediately took charge.

“I think the clay, for sure, is her surface,” Wozniacki said afterwards. “I think any slow surface suits her because she tries to slow the pace down. She doesn’t give you two of the same balls, so she changes the pace.

Caroline Wozniacki congratulates Daria Kasatkina after their match (Getty)

“She tries to slow it down, and then, once she has the opportunity, she’s going to go in and hit one really hard and then slow it down again.I think the slower the surface is, the better for her. She has very good hands and good angles and everything.”

Kasatkina, who will now take on Sloane Stephens in the quarter-finals, is through to the last eight for the first time. The 21-year-old Russian, who was knocked out in the third round on both her previous appearances here, has made great progress this year. Having started 2018 at No 24 in the world rankings, she is already up to No 14 and could make further progress next week.

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