
NEW YORK -- Novak Djokovic took a two-set lead against Taylor Fritz, an opponent he always beats, to close in on the semifinals, a round he often reaches at the US Open, and marked the occasion by blowing kisses to those in Tuesday night's crowd pulling for the last American man in the field.
That was just a taste of the back-and-forth between Djokovic and some of the folks in the Arthur Ashe Stadium seats, and there was still work that remained, but he would finish off a 6-3, 7-5, 3-6, 6-4 victory. Djokovic improved to 11-0 against 2024 runner-up Fritz and reached a record-extending 53rd Grand Slam semifinal, a total that includes a record-tying 14 at Flushing Meadows.
The match ended anticlimactically with a double-fault by No. 4-seeded Fritz, whose exit means the U.S. drought will continue without a male singles champion at any major since 2003, when Andy Roddick won in New York.
On Friday, Djokovic will play in his fourth Slam semifinal of the season and take on five-time major champion Carlos Alcaraz, who hasn't dropped a set in the tournament. He was a 6-4, 6-2, 6-4 winner against No. 20 Jiri Lehecka earlier Tuesday.
Djokovic leads No. 2 seed Alcaraz 5-3 head-to-head, winning their two most recent matchups -- in the Australian Open quarterfinals this January and in the final at the Paris Olympics last year, when the Serbian finally fulfilled his wish to win a gold medal for his country.
The last two men's quarterfinals are Wednesday: Alex De Minaur vs. Felix Auger-Aliassime, and defending champion Jannik Sinner vs. Lorenzo Musetti in an all-Italian matchup at night.
On Tuesday night, both men were dressed entirely in black -- shirts, shorts, socks and shoes. Even Djokovic's wrist bands were black, as was Fritz's headband, which he had on wrong at the start, so the white lettering of his clothing sponsor's name was upside-down until he made a change after the second set.
If the players' get-ups looked alike, that's where the similarities stopped. Djokovic, who has won four of his 24 major championships at the US Open, most recently in 2023, did what he usually does to Fritz -- and, to be fair, nearly everyone else -- which is to say: return masterfully, control the longest points and serve to all the right spots, particularly in the clutch.
In sum, the 38-year-old Djokovic was generally a step, and a thought, or two ahead of the 27-year-old Fritz, whose serve got better over the last two sets.
Djokovic won 25 of the 42 points that lasted at least nine strokes. He saved 11 of the 13 break chances he faced. And he won 10 of the 11 points when he serve-and-volleyed.
Fritz came out a bit shaky. Not his best serving. Not his best groundstrokes. Maybe it was the foe and their one-sided history. Maybe it was the setting, the stage, the stakes.
Maybe it was the earlier-than-originally-planned start, on account of the cancellation of the preceding women's quarterfinal between Aryna Sabalenka and Marketa Vondrousova, who withdrew with a knee iniury.
Djokovic stole Fritz's initial service game on the way to a 3-0 advantage that soon was a two-set advantage. But Fritz worked his way into the match, serving better and making things more interesting, but never enough to move ahead.
Along the way, Djokovic got into it with the spectators backing his opponent, although it's worth nothing there were plenty supporting the man who's spent more time at No. 1 than anyone in tennis history, too.
Still, there were those applauding and cheering faults by Djokovic, considered a no-no in tennis. When Djokovic smacked one forehand winner, he stared into the stands as if to say, "How do you like me now?" Soon he was sending them sarcastic kisses or holding his finger to his lips to say, "Shhhh!"
It reached a head in a pivotal game early in the third set, when the fault celebrations grew more raucous as the clock passed 10:30 p.m. Djokovic walked over to chair umpire Damian Dumusois to ask him, "What are you going to do?" and then mockingly repeated the words the official kept saying in an unsuccessful attempt to settle the interruptions, "Thank you. Please. Thank you. Please."
Soon, Fritz was smacking a forehand winner to break for a 3-1 lead in that set, one he would take.
The match was a little more than 2 1/2 hours old, and the point total was tied: 100-100.
But Djokovic came through when it mattered most.