French hopes on the rise as Monfils, Gasquet cruise into third round

PARIS-- Gael Monfils cantered into the French Open third round, easing concerns he had going into his home grand slam with a 6-1 6-4 6-1 victory over Brazil's Thiago Monteiro on Thursday to set up a mouth-watering clash with compatriot Richard Gasquet.
  The 15th seed conceded he had no points of reference after losing his only two matches on clay in an injured-plagued season, but another straight sets win was enough to boost the Frenchman's confidence.
  "Today I played a very solid match. There were not many long rallies in my previous match but now I'm more confident on my level and it bodes well for the rest of the tournament," said Monfils.
  His performance brought some relief -- and possibly hope -- to the home crowd after French number one Jo-Wilfried Tsonga was sent packing in the first round on Wednesday.
  "It was a very good match from my end, with great strikes. I liked to feel that I could hit the ball well from both sides, that I was able to stick to the plan," said Monfils.
  No Frenchman has won the title at Roland Garros since Yannick Noah lifted the Musketeers Cup in 1983.
  There will be three in the third round, and at least one in the fourth with Monfils taking on 24th seed Gasquet on Sunday after his countryman sailed past Victor Estrella Burgos 6-1 6-0 6-4, winning the first 13 points of a one-sided match.
  "I started well and had no physical pain, I wanted to get it over with before the night," said Gasquet, who like Monfils is now 30 years old.
  "Gael is one of my best friends, we're both getting better physically and let's hope we'll play a great match."
  In the women's draw, Kristina Mladenovic, one of the pre-tournament favourites, was joined in the third round on Thursday by compatriots Caroline Garcia and Alize Cornet.
  Garcia had to work hard to beat fellow Frenchwoman Chloe Paquet 7-5 6-4 to reach the third round here for the first time, while Cornet upset Czech 20th seed Barbora Strycova 6-4 6-1.
  It is only the third time in 10 years that three French women have made it into the third round.

Cavaliers-Warriors set for ultimate Finals rubber match

An NBA season that has had little in the way of drama will come to a gripping close over the next two weeks when two familiar foes fittingly battle in the Finals for an unprecedented third consecutive year. LeBron James and the Cleveland Cavaliers are four wins away from repeating as NBA champions in what may go down as one of the greatest championship showdowns ever, but standing in their way is a sharpshooting Golden State Warriors team that beat them in the 2015 Finals. The ultimate championship rubber match, which most everyone expected the moment last year's Finals ended, begins on Thursday in Oakland and will wrap up what has been a predictable 82-game regular season and lopsided postseason.

England expect to end drought in Champions

 LONDON-- England have never won a global 50-over tournament but they will not get a better chance to end their long wait than in this year's Champions Trophy on home soil.

Mladenovic back on track with comfortable win

 PARIS- - Home favourite Kristina Mladenovic ignored her bad back and fed off a buoyant crowd as she cruised into the French Open third round with an emphatic 6-2 6-3 victory over Italy's Sara Errani on Wednesday.

Highlights of French Open third day

PARIS-- World number one Andy Murray defied expectations that he would struggle at this year's French Open by beating Russia's Andrey Kuznetsov 6-4 4-6 6-2 6-0 in the first round on Tuesday, but day three at Roland Garros still served up plenty of other upsets.

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