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Nadal demolishes Hewitt At French Open

Double defending champion Rafael Nadal crushed the spirited resistance of Lleyton Hewitt to move into the French Open quarter-finals and a clash with close friend and 1998 champion Carlos Moya.

Nadal, bidding to emulate Bjorn Borg by winning three Roland Garros titles in a row, defeated Hewitt 6-3, 6-1, 7-6 (7-5) in a fourth round tie which only lived up to the pre-match hype in the third set.

Nadal's Roland Garros record now stands at 18 wins in 18 matches and the outcome of the encounter, a repeat of last year's fourth round match which the Spaniard won in four sets, was never in doubt.

Hewitt dropped serve twice in the first four games of the opening set, managing just four points in the process.

The Australian saved three set points as he broke back to trail 3-5 but then undid all his good work by handing the set to Nadal in the ninth game when he was broken for the third time.

The second set was even more one-sided with Nadal reeling off five games on the trot to open a two-sets lead.

Hewitt's famed fighting spirit and tenacity kept him in the match and he sent the third set into a tiebreaker as Nadal was serving for the match at 6-5.

Hewitt, a former Wimbledon and US Open champion, nipped ahead in the breaker and was at 5-4 when he buried an easy forehand into the net.

There was to be no way back for the 26-year-old and Nadal claimed his quarter-final place when Hewitt again netted a dispirited forehand.

"He got off to a great start. He served well, a lot better than he did in Hamburg," Hewitt said, referring to their semi-final clash in Germany last month.

"He was hitting his forehand up the line accurately. He was in the zone early on and it was hard to press him.

"I just had to try and make a match of it in the third set."

Thirty-year-old Moya, the oldest player left in the competition, played his first Roland Garros in 1996 and was champion two years later.

"I'm the oldest guy left but I still remember when I was the youngest," he said.

"Time passes so quickly that you don't realise it.

"But I am proud to be the oldest guy in the quarter-finals and I think I still have some very good tennis ahead of me." SOURCE: © 2007 Australian Broadcasting Corporation

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