<p>Daniil Medvedev's French Open campaign came to an end on Tuesday with an ill-judged underarm serve on match point followed by an impassioned outburst over his eagerly-awaited showdown with Stefanos Tsitsipas being played inside an empty stadium.</p>.<p>The colourful world number two was beaten 6-3, 7-6 (7/3), 7-5 by Greek fifth seed Tsitsipas who will face Germany's Alexander Zverev for a place in Sunday's final.</p>.<p>It was only Tsitsipas's second win over Medvedev in eight meetings and it ended in bizarre fashion.</p>.<p>The mercurial Russian decided to serve underarm on match point down.</p>.<p>But as he approached the net, hoping to finish the point with a volley, Tsitsipas merely fired a backhand winner beyond him.</p>.<p>"I was thinking about this during the whole match, like that maybe in the important point I could do it because my opinion was that he was quite far back in the court, so that can always work," explained the 25-year-old.</p>.<p><strong><a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/sports/tennis/djokovic-survives-nadal-cruises-at-french-open-as-gauff-makes-slam-breakthrough-995025.html" target="_blank">Read | Djokovic survives, Nadal cruises at French Open as Gauff makes Slam breakthrough</a></strong></p>.<p>"I didn't see the opportunity before but I thought it's going to be a good choice to bring him surprise. I sometimes do it on practice.</p>.<p>"Usually guys are a bit surprised. But it didn't work out at all. I won't say it was a mistake. It was something that I dared to do and maybe next time I won't do it knowing that he's ready."</p>.<p>Tsitsipas had his own description for the ploy which backfired so badly for his opponent.</p>.<p>"A very millennial shot," said the Greek, who also made the semi-finals in Paris last year where he was beaten by Novak Djokovic.</p>.<p>"I saw he kind of stopped. I felt like there was something coming up, so at that point I think I got prepared for it."</p>.<p>Medvedev had never won a match at Roland Garros in four attempts before this year.</p>.<p>So winning four matches in one visit was progress even if he was dismayed that his match was selected for the penultimate evening session.</p>.<p>It was played inside an empty Court Philippe Chatrier as spectators were banned under a 9pm Covid-19 curfew.</p>.<p>This year's French Open is staging evening sessions for the first time under a broadcast agreement with streaming giant Amazon.</p>.<p>"It was without a doubt the match of the day but Roland Garros preferred Amazon to people," said Medvedev.</p>.<p>He compared the situation to the Formula One world championship when the 2020 Australian Grand Prix was set to take place in Melbourne even though there had been a Covid-19 outbreak in the paddock.</p>.<p>The race was eventually cancelled.</p>.<p>"Yesterday I started the third season of (Netflix documentary series) 'Drive to Survive' and there's an episode called 'Cash Is King'," added Medvedev.</p>.<p>"They were in Australia ready to race, and they asked Lewis Hamilton what he thinks about racing in the conditions the world was in right now, and he said, I don't know what we are doing here.</p>.<p>"And so they asked him, Why do you think they make you race? And he said, 'Cash is King.' It was the same here."</p>.<p>Tsitsipas now has the most wins on the ATP tour this season (38) and won clay court titles at Monte Carlo and Lyon.</p>.<p>He will be playing in a third successive Grand Slam semi-final.</p>.<p>Medvedev, the 2019 US Open runner-up and this year's Australian Open finalist, suffered his first quarter-final loss at a major.</p>
<p>Daniil Medvedev's French Open campaign came to an end on Tuesday with an ill-judged underarm serve on match point followed by an impassioned outburst over his eagerly-awaited showdown with Stefanos Tsitsipas being played inside an empty stadium.</p>.<p>The colourful world number two was beaten 6-3, 7-6 (7/3), 7-5 by Greek fifth seed Tsitsipas who will face Germany's Alexander Zverev for a place in Sunday's final.</p>.<p>It was only Tsitsipas's second win over Medvedev in eight meetings and it ended in bizarre fashion.</p>.<p>The mercurial Russian decided to serve underarm on match point down.</p>.<p>But as he approached the net, hoping to finish the point with a volley, Tsitsipas merely fired a backhand winner beyond him.</p>.<p>"I was thinking about this during the whole match, like that maybe in the important point I could do it because my opinion was that he was quite far back in the court, so that can always work," explained the 25-year-old.</p>.<p><strong><a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/sports/tennis/djokovic-survives-nadal-cruises-at-french-open-as-gauff-makes-slam-breakthrough-995025.html" target="_blank">Read | Djokovic survives, Nadal cruises at French Open as Gauff makes Slam breakthrough</a></strong></p>.<p>"I didn't see the opportunity before but I thought it's going to be a good choice to bring him surprise. I sometimes do it on practice.</p>.<p>"Usually guys are a bit surprised. But it didn't work out at all. I won't say it was a mistake. It was something that I dared to do and maybe next time I won't do it knowing that he's ready."</p>.<p>Tsitsipas had his own description for the ploy which backfired so badly for his opponent.</p>.<p>"A very millennial shot," said the Greek, who also made the semi-finals in Paris last year where he was beaten by Novak Djokovic.</p>.<p>"I saw he kind of stopped. I felt like there was something coming up, so at that point I think I got prepared for it."</p>.<p>Medvedev had never won a match at Roland Garros in four attempts before this year.</p>.<p>So winning four matches in one visit was progress even if he was dismayed that his match was selected for the penultimate evening session.</p>.<p>It was played inside an empty Court Philippe Chatrier as spectators were banned under a 9pm Covid-19 curfew.</p>.<p>This year's French Open is staging evening sessions for the first time under a broadcast agreement with streaming giant Amazon.</p>.<p>"It was without a doubt the match of the day but Roland Garros preferred Amazon to people," said Medvedev.</p>.<p>He compared the situation to the Formula One world championship when the 2020 Australian Grand Prix was set to take place in Melbourne even though there had been a Covid-19 outbreak in the paddock.</p>.<p>The race was eventually cancelled.</p>.<p>"Yesterday I started the third season of (Netflix documentary series) 'Drive to Survive' and there's an episode called 'Cash Is King'," added Medvedev.</p>.<p>"They were in Australia ready to race, and they asked Lewis Hamilton what he thinks about racing in the conditions the world was in right now, and he said, I don't know what we are doing here.</p>.<p>"And so they asked him, Why do you think they make you race? And he said, 'Cash is King.' It was the same here."</p>.<p>Tsitsipas now has the most wins on the ATP tour this season (38) and won clay court titles at Monte Carlo and Lyon.</p>.<p>He will be playing in a third successive Grand Slam semi-final.</p>.<p>Medvedev, the 2019 US Open runner-up and this year's Australian Open finalist, suffered his first quarter-final loss at a major.</p>