
Alcaraz dumped out by Lehecka in Qatar Open quarters

Carlos Alcaraz crashed out of the Qatar Open in the quarter-finals on Thursday after losing to Jiri Lehecka, the Spaniard heading for the exit along with second seed Alex de Minaur.
The top seed dropped the first set before recovering to level, and then led by a break in the decider, but world number 25 Lehecka won the final four games for a 6-3, 3-6, 6-4 victory.
Alcaraz entered the clash on a seven-match winning streak following his triumph in Rotterdam earlier this month but ran into trouble against a confident Lehecka, who won his second career title in Brisbane to start the year.
"I feel great," said Lehecka. "To win a match like that against a player like this is a super big achievement. I believed in myself and knew I had the level to produce this kind of tennis.
"I think the most important part was I believed in my game and did not back down."
The 23-year-old Czech will play British eighth seed Jack Draper or Italy's Matteo Berrettini on Friday for a place in the final. Lehecka is through to the last four in Doha for the second time.
Berrettini, a former world number six and Wimbledon runner-up, knocked out Novak Djokovic in the second round.
Andrey Rublev converted his eighth match point against De Minaur to take his place in the semi-finals.
The Russian, a Qatar winner in 2020, had to dig deep to down the Australian 6-1, 3-6, 7-6 (10/8).
Fifth-seeded Rublev let slip a 5-2 lead in the final set as De Minaur scrambled back into contention to force a tiebreak.
Rublev finally got over the line, the 27-year-old saving a match point himself in a memorable quarter-final clash.
"When I had my first match point, I played really well," said Rublev.
"I did everything amazing and he just played an unreal rally. He made the backhand down the line and I played a good volley.
"Then he makes a forehand pass down the line. In most of the matches, normally after these points, they win - it's a turning (point).
"I then started to get a bit more tight and more emotional, I was a bit unlucky. Then when I lost my serve, I said 'Okay, whatever, if I'm gonna lose, at least just try to do your best until the end'."
This was his first win against a top-10 player since August last year.
Rublev's reward for his fourth semi-final appearance in Qatar was a meeting with Felix Auger-Aliassime.
The Canadian was leading his quarter-final against Daniil Medvedev 6-3 when the Russian had to retire.
B.Cooper--TNT