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From first ball to last, keep up to date with the latest from Roland Garros every day on TENNIS.com. We'll have match updates, photos, video highlights and more in our daily notebook: Passport to RG.

Back to the match for a moment: it was all Sofia Kenin in the second and third sets of her 2-6, 6-2, 6-1 victory over Fiona Ferro. (More on this result to come on TENNIS.com.)

But, now, back to the coaching question. Kenin didn't realize that it was her coach, not Ferro's, that moved so they were seated next to each other. Still, as she put it to Tennis Channel's Jon Wertheim afterward, "My dad is superstitious, but he changed it up and it started going my way."

The result leaves only Kristina Mladenovic waving the French flag at Roland Garros; she'll play doubles tomorrow on Court Suzanne Lenglen.

Kenin—who is also in the doubles quarterfinals with Bethanie Mattek-Sands—will await the winner of the Ons Jabeur-Danielle Collins match, which will commence at 11 a.m. local time Tuesday on Court Phillipe Chatrier.

So much that they're going to grab a drink after the match. As Tennis Channel's Jon Wertheim explains, the situation is "more comedy than scandal":

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Kenin now leads Ferro 4-0 in the third.

The last women's quarterfinal, Ons Jabeur vs. Danielle Collins, has been postponed to Tuesday.

Upon the conclusion of the Sofia Kenin vs. Fiona Ferro match (Kenin leads 3-0 in the third), Pablo Carreno Busta will play Daniel Altmaier.

Uncouth under normal circumstances and potentially reckless during a pandemic, coach Kenin has changed the off-court dynamic—as the play on court has shifted to his daughter's favor.

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It's an odd look, but it's working for the Kenins; Sofia took the second set, 6-2.

In that set, Kenin won 30 points to Ferro's 18; in the opening set, the Frenchwoman won 38 against her opponent's 30.

Alex Kenin, who often calls attention to himself with his reactions to his daughter's play, is being watched closely by chair umpire—not for his proximity to Ferro's coach Emmanuel Planque, but for potential coaching.

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With rain outside and a French player inside, it's a safe bet that any fan remaining at Roland Garros is inside Court Philippe Chatrier. And in addition to being dry, they're probably happy. Fiona Ferro, the 49th-ranked 23-year-old, has just won the first set over fourth-seeded Sofia Kenin, 6-2.

If this result holds, just two of the seven women's quarterfinalists will be seeds—No. 3 Elina Svitolina, and No. 7 Petra Kvitova—with No. 30 Ons Jabeur the only other who could join them. The Tunisian's fourth-round match with Danielle Collins is currently suspended, due to weather.

Passport to RG, Day 9: Kenin and coach through in 3; Djokovic rolls

Passport to RG, Day 9: Kenin and coach through in 3; Djokovic rolls

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Thankfully for Novak Djokovic, his fourth-round match at Roland Garros won't generate headlines like his fourth-rounder at the US Open.

Still, it's noteworthy how clinical the world No. 1 was against the dangerous 15th seed, Karen Khachanov. In two hours and 23 minutes, the Serb was his brutally efficient self, breaking the Russian six times with a bevy of deep and often jaw-dropping returns.

"You'd think Novak was the guy who was 6'6" tall with the cannon," Tennis Channel's Jon Wertheim said after the match, commenting on Djokovic's peerless ability to segue defense into offense. "I thought it was a command performance...with typically savvy returning."

MATCH POINT:

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The win puts Djokovic into his 11th consecutive Roland Garros quarterfinal, and his 14th in Paris overall.

All eyes are on the only match currently taking place at Roland Garros, and it's going as most observers expected it would. Djokovic now leads Khachanov by two sets and a break (6-4, 6-3, 2-0), having won four of 12 break points thus far. Khachanov has only broken Djokovic once.

The Danielle Collins-Ons Jabeur match is expected to be moved to Court Philippe Chatrier, the only court with a roof above, after the conclusion of the upcoming fourth-rounder between Sofia Kenin and Fiona Ferro.

Small consolidation for Khachanov: he's the first player to have pushed the top seed to a 6-4 set at Roland Garros.

Should Djokovic win, he'll reach his 11th consecutive quarterfinal at Roland Garros.

Passport to RG, Day 9: Kenin and coach through in 3; Djokovic rolls

Passport to RG, Day 9: Kenin and coach through in 3; Djokovic rolls

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Last Sunday, on the same day that Roland Garros began, Stefanos Tsitsipas and Andrey Rublev played for the Hamburg title. Two days later, in Paris, both young stars pulled off comebacks from two sets down. As Steve Tignor put it in his story, "...in getting through their matches today, each made a small but important step up the pro-tennis hill."

Both have since taken three more small but significant steps, setting up a tantalizing rematch. Since his first-round escape of Jaume Munar, Tsitsipas hasn't lost a set—he took out Grigor Dimitrov today, 6-3, 7-6 (9), 6-2—while Rublev has won two four-setters, most recently over Marton Fucsovics, 6-7 (4), 7-5, 6-4, 7-6 (3). Both men were tested at times on Sunday, particularly in tie tiebreaks, but continued their climb up the hill.

Passport to RG, Day 9: Kenin and coach through in 3; Djokovic rolls

Passport to RG, Day 9: Kenin and coach through in 3; Djokovic rolls

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In Hamburg, Tsitsipas served for the match before Rublev's late push saw him end on top. The Greek has matched the Russian in their paths to the quarterfinals at Roland Garros, but he'd like to diverge from this point on.

If he does, the cosmopolitan shotmaker could try his hand at some more French—which he spoke after his win.

We often talk about the "best player who hasn't won a major," but who would be your choice for the "best player who hasn't won a major in a while?" Mine is Petra Kvitova, the two-time Wimbledon champion who, since claiming her second Slam title in 2014, has reached two US Open quarterfinals and finished runner-up at the Australian Open.

On Monday, the 30-year-old reached just her second Roland Garros quarterfinal—she made the semis way back in 2012—with a 6-2, 6-4 victory over Shuai Zhang. The hallmarks of Kvitova's peerless game were on display in Paris, as they were in her previous match, against Leylah Fernandez, with 23 winners and four breaks of serve in an hour and 29 minutes. The win, convincing but not without mistakes, also puts Kvitova back in the WTA Top 10.

MATCH POINT:

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It was an emotional triumph for Kvitova, not because of the challenge she surmounted today, but because of what it's taken for her to get here. A well-documented home invasion in late 2016 left Kvitova injured physically—her left, hitting hand was slashed—and, naturally, scarred mentally.

"In tennis, we never know when it's going to end," Kvitova said after the match. She also told Tennis Channel that her runner-up finish last year in Melbourne meant more to than her Wimbledon wins.

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Kvitova will face Laura Siegemund, another straight-sets winner on Day 9.

Passport to RG, Day 9: Kenin and coach through in 3; Djokovic rolls

Passport to RG, Day 9: Kenin and coach through in 3; Djokovic rolls