Novak Djokovic loses his world No 1 status after withdrawing from French Open due to knee injury… with Jannik Sinner making history in his place after reaching semi-finals

Novak Djokovic has lost his world No 1 ranking after withdrawing from the French Open with a torn meniscus in his right knee.

The 37-year-old suffered the injury during his fourth-round match against Francisco Cerundolo but fought through pain to win in five sets. An MRI scan revealed the bad news, however, and he was forced to pull out of Wednesday’s quarter-final match against Casper Ruud.

As a consequence, the 24-time Grand Slam champion will lose his place at the top  and 22-year-old Jannik Sinner will take his spot.  

Sinner became world number one without knowing it as he reached the semi-finals of the French Open for the first time.

The 22-year-old, who is the first man from Italy to be world number one, sank Bulgarian veteran Dimitrov 6-2 6-4 7-6 (3).

‘It means a lot to me for sure,’ he said. ‘It’s not the way we all were expecting actually. He had two very long matches, tough matches, five sets, so it’s tough. The first one he finished really late also.

‘You know, it’s tough also for the tournament. Novak retiring, it’s always tough.

‘Talking about myself, I am very happy about this achievement. It’s a lot of work we put in daily. It’s a daily routine. Obviously I’m happy to have this number.

‘In two days there is a very important match for me, the semi-finals, so I’m focused about that at the moment. But, yes, of course, very happy to have this number now.’

Sinner will play fellow young gun Carlos Alcaraz, who until last September was world number one himself.

Alcaraz, 21, claimed he had the ‘key’ to beating Stefanos Tsitsipas ahead of their night session quarter-final.

And the Wimbledon champion was as good as his word, overpowering the Greek ninth seed 6-3 7-6 (3) 6-4.

Tsitsipas made a brief fight of things in the second set, and complained of hindrance to the umpire following one elongated Alcaraz grunt during the tie-break.

But a double-fault midway through the third set gifted Alcaraz the initiative and the Spaniard duly took his head-to-head with Tsitsipas to six wins from six matches.

‘I think it was a very good match, I played great,’ said Alcaraz. ‘I controlled very well my emotions and was really calm in the moments I had to be. I’m really happy to play a semi-final here in Roland Garros.

‘Jannik will be a really difficult challenge, right now he’s the best player in the world, the player playing the best tennis right now.

‘We’ve played some great, great matches. Thanks to him I push myself to be a better player, to improve my game to try to beat him. I’m ready to take that challenge.’

There is no doubt Alcaraz has got well and truly inside the mind of Tsitsipas.

‘I just need to get through that mental barrier,’ said the 25-year-old. ‘I feel like there was some voodoo stuff going on today on the court.

‘I wasn’t able to just get the ball where I wanted. It’s really unbelievable.’

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