PARIS, France, Nov 3 – Novak Djokovic stayed on track to earn the year-end No 1 ranking for a record eighth time by beating Tomas Martin Etcheverry 6-3, 6-2 in the second round of the Paris Masters on Wednesday.
Djokovic was competing in his first singles match since mid-September when he played for Serbia in the group stage of the Davis Cup.
“At the beginning of the match, it was a bit difficult for me to find the rhythm,” the top seed said on court, “but at the end of the second set, it was really good.”
Djokovic won five straight games to take the opening set with an ace and led 2-0 in the second set. The Serbian player only faced one break point that he saved with a forehand cross-court winner at 1-0 in the second set.
A six-time champion at the Paris Masters, Djokovic increased his lead to 5-1 before converting his third match point when Etcheverry netted a backhand.
Djokovic can widen the gap with No 2 Carlos Alcaraz in the race for the year-end top spot after the Spaniard lost to qualifier Roman Safiullin on Tuesday.
While Djokovic had racked up 500 more points than Alcaraz this season before the Paris Masters, he won’t be able to clinch the year-end No 1 spot in Paris, since Alcaraz still gets 10 points for his second-round defeat.
There are 1,000 points for the Paris Masters winner and 1,500 points for a perfect run at the ATP Finals.
Djokovic holds the men’s record, with seven year-end No 1 finishes, one more than Pete Sampras. Women’s tennis great Steffi Graf holds the overall record with eight.
“Of course, my greatest motivation is still a love for the game. I really like competing. So, it’s as simple as that, “Djokovic told a news conference on Saturday. “And then, you know, I always have goals, and to win another slam, to be No 1 again, to finish the year as No 1. Those are, let’s say, the big goals.”
Alcaraz is the only player who can overtake Djokovic after Daniil Medvedev dropped out of contention after he was beaten by Grigor Dimitrov 6-3, 6-7 (4), 7-6 (2) earlier on Wednesday.
Medvedev was booed off the court after remonstrating with the crowd during the match.
The crowd upset Medvedev in the 11th game of the second set, jeering him as he was about to serve after he had thrown his racket. The third-ranked Russian went back to his chair and complained to the referee before talking directly to the spectators in French.
“If there’s one who whistles, I don’t play,” Medvedev told the crowd. “You don’t whistle, I play. So, you shut your mouths.”
From that moment, the crowd overwhelmingly threw its support behind Dimitrov, and Medvedev appeared to make a rude hand gesture toward some spectators as he walked off the court after the loss.
“I play in Bercy much better when there is no crowd at all,” Medvedev joked afterward, referring to winning the Paris Masters title in 2020 during the pandemic in an empty arena. “That’s the only time I won the tournament.”
Meanwhile, Tommy Paul and Casper Ruud can no longer qualify for the ATP Finals. The 12th-seeded Paul lost to qualifier Botic Van de Zandschulp 6-4, 2-6, 6-3, while eighth-seeded Ruud was defeated by Francisco Cerundolo 7-5, 6-4. Stefanos Tsitsipas, Alexander Zverev, Holger Rune, Hubert Hurkacz and Alex de Minaur stayed in contention for the three remaining spots at the eight-man tournament in Turin, Italy, which takes place from Nov 12-19.
Before the Paris Masters, Djokovic, Alcaraz, Medvedev, Jannik Sinner and Andrey Rublev had already qualified for the ATP Finals.
In a late match that ended at nearly 2:30 am in Paris, fourth-seeded Sinner beat Mackenzie McDonald 6-7 (6), 7-5, 6-1. Seventh-seeded Tsitsipas beat Felix Auger-Aliassime 6-3,7-6 (4), 10th-seeded Zverev outlasted Ugo Humbert 6-4, 6-7 (3), 7-6 (5), and sixth-seeded Rune defeated Dominic Thiem 6-4, 6-2.
Hurkacz, seeded 11th, beat Roberto Bautista Agut 6-3, 6-2, and 13th-seeded De Minaur rallied past Dusan Lajovic 4-6, 6-4, 6-4.
Newly crowned Kenya National Rally Champion Jasmeet Singh Chana is taking a relaxed approach to this weekend’s SUC Guru Nanak Rally- despite the Sikh Union round being one of the events on his wish list that have remained elusive.
And despite never having started a penultimate round of the series before without pressure, “Iceman” is leaving nothing to chance.
“I am under no pressure whatsoever and this is the first rally of the year I will be relaxed,” quipped Iceman.
Winning the fabled Guru Nanak Rally has for the longest time remained on Iceman’s bucket list but the former Two Wheel Drive Champion hopes this year it can come to fruition!! This weekend’s Guru Nanak is sponsored by CFAO Motors who are also providing a Toyota GR Hilux that will be leading the way as our route opener.
Jasmeet: “Guru Nanak is an event associated with Sikhism so it’s a rally I have always approached with vim and vigor. I would like to thank Rubis Energy Kenya for the support and trust they have offered us in our title campaign!”
Iceman is one of the few drivers in the history of the iconic KNRC to win virtually all titles in the lower tier series championships.
With an apparently insatiable appetite for success, Iceman finally got his mitts on the coveted KNRC diadem with two rounds remaining during last month’s KNRC 7 KMSC Rally.
His fairy tale achievement was a welcome relief to the Nairobi based auto mechanic who had lost this coveted title to Karan Patel in Voi on homestretch last season.
Last year, Iceman went into the season-closing fixture (Guru Nanak) at the Teita Sisal Estates with a 9-points advantage over Karan-only to miss out on the all-important podium and title much to his chagrin.
His participation at this year’s penultimate Guru Nanak in Soysambu on Sunday is a mere formality as he already got the KNRC title in the bag.
Iceman already has most of the KNRC titles including Two Wheel Drive, Group S, Group N, Division One, Division Three and a handful of podium finishes under his belt.
Leaving broken records in his wake, the Nairobi based driver is ushering in a new era of KNRC hoping to win more titles in the foreseeable future.
–Fast learner–
Iceman is a second generation driver who at childhood was inspired by his father Kulwant Singh Chana. He has also learnt the ropes from his elder brothers Ravi and Jaswinder Chana who competed before him.
“It takes years for rally drivers to build the skills to race at 200kph over asphalt, gravel but as a second generation ace driver, one needs to be quick, and they need to understand the vehicle, read the surface and know the route layout from recceing with the co-driver,” he was expounded.
Iceman said in finality:”It’s been a hard year but we managed to seal the title well in time. I thank Rubis Energy for trusting me and my family brothers and wife





























