It was two o'clock in the morning when Luciano Darderi completed the biggest match of his career. By defeating Rafael Jodar 7-6(5), 5-7, 6-0 in the Italian Open quarterfinals, the 24-year-old Italian reached his first Masters 1000 semifinal in a truly extraordinary setting.
The evening delivered a cinematic storyline. As the first set headed to a tiebreak, smoke from the nearby Stadio Olimpico, located just 500 meters away, drifted across the Campo Centrale. Fireworks from the Coppa Italia final disrupted visibility to the point of halting play and interfering with the electronic line-calling system.
Darderi won the tiebreak 7-5 before letting the match slip away in the second set. Having led 3-0 and held two match points at 4-5, he allowed Jodar to fight back and level at one set apiece. A turning point that could have proved fatal.
The third set told a completely different story. After a grueling 28-minute second game in which he earned the break, Darderi unleashed relentless tennis to inflict a 6-0 bagel on his opponent. "I think this is the best win of my career because of the crowd and everything here in Rome," he said.
Seeded 18th, Darderi had reached nine ATP semifinals before this, all at ATP 250 level. This breakthrough at Masters 1000 level marks a turning point for the Italian-Argentine player, who becomes the tenth Italian to reach this stage at a Masters 1000 event since 1990.
In the semifinals, Darderi will face for the first time. The 23rd seed defeated Karen Khachanov 6-1, 1-6, 6-2 earlier in the day. For Rome's local hero, the fairy tale may not be over yet.


