Djokovic, Draper set up last-16 showdown

AFP

Third seed Novak Djokovic has overcome a second-set reverse to beat American Aleksandar Kovacevic 6-4 1-6 6-4 at Indian Wells on Monday and reach the last 16 for the first time since 2017, setting up a meeting with defending champion Jack Draper, who swept past 19th seed Francisco Cerundolo 6-1 7-5.

The 24-times Grand Slam champion, who has won a record-equalling five titles at the California desert event, won the first set but was taken apart in the second before asserting his authority to seal victory in two hours and two minutes.

"Great performance from Alex," Djokovic said. "We know each other, we speak the same language, obviously, his whole family is Serbian. He's one of the best talents we have out there, particularly, one-handed backhand and, you know, it's very rare nowadays, and he's played a great tournament so far.

"Today I knew if he serves well and if he picks his spot in the box, it's going to be hard to break. That's what happened, actually. I mean, he was serving extremely well," the 38-year-old Czech added.

Britain's Draper, meanwhile, was in commanding form as he breezed through the opening set before seeing off a stiffer challenge from the Argentine in the second.

American Alex Michelsen made headlines, ousting seventh seed and home favourite Taylor Fritz 6-4 7-6(6), while Briton Cameron Norrie continued his fine run by defeating Australian sixth seed Alex de Minaur 6-4 6-4.

Australian qualifier Rinky Hijikata also caught the eye, recovering from a first-set tiebreak deficit to defeat Kazakh 10th seed Alexander Bublik 6-7(3) 7-6(3) 6-3 in a hard-fought contest lasting over two and a half hours.

On the women's side, Katerina Siniakova caused the biggest upset of the day by eliminating Russian eighth seed and defending champion Mirra Andreeva 4-6 7-6(5) 6-3.

"I had no pressure at all. It was all on her... I was just trying to fight every point, change the rhythm, and I think I did a really great job, so I'm really proud," the Czech said after the almost three-hour match.

Czech Karolina Muchova was equally dominant, dispatching Croatian Antonia Ruzic 6-0 6-3, while Swiss Belinda Bencic cruised past Belgian Elise Mertens 6-2 6-3.

Second seed Iga Swiatek, a two-time champion at Indian Wells, overpowered Maria Sakkari with a commanding 6-3 6-2 win.

The fifth seed Jessica Pegula demonstrated her resilience by recovering to defeat Jelena Ostapenko 4-6 6-3 6-2 and book her place in the fourth round.

The American dropped the opening set to the hard-hitting Latvian and former French Open champion before finding her range to take the next two sets and seal a hard-fought victory.

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