<p>Novak Djokovic said he was "feeling okay" after overcoming neck and shoulder troubles to defeat Pablo Carreno Busta on Wednesday and set up a French Open semi-final showdown with Stefanos Tsitsipas.</p>.<p>Djokovic beat Spanish 17th seed Carreno Busta 4-6, 6-2, 6-3, 6-4 to reach the last four of a major for the 38th time as he chases a second French Open and 18th Grand Slam title.</p>.<p>However, the world number one required treatment on his upper left arm after dropping his first set of the tournament on a chilly autumn evening in Paris.</p>.<p>"I definitely didn't feel great coming onto the court today, a few things happened in the warm-up," said Djokovic.</p>.<p>"I had some neck issues and some shoulder issues. I don't really want to get too much into it.</p>.<p>"I'm feeling okay, I'm still in the tournament so I don't want to reveal too much. As the match went on, I felt better, didn't feel as much pain."</p>.<p>The Serb now sits two wins away from becoming the first man in half a century -- and only the third in history -- to win all four Slams twice.</p>.<p>His only defeat in 37 matches this year came to Carreno Busta following his disqualification at the US Open for an angry swipe of a ball which hit a female line judge squarely in the throat.</p>.<p>Djokovic again looked vulnerable against Carreno Busta, who twice had chances to break in the second set but could not capitalise, instead losing his own serve on two occasions.</p>.<p>"For a set and a half he was the better player, dictating the play," said Djokovic.</p>.<p>The Serb unleashed a primal roar having fended off two break points in the first game of the third set and appeared in control at 3-0 until Carreno Busta clawed back to 3-all.</p>.<p>But the top seed reclaimed the initiative with another break at 4-3 on his way to taking the third set.</p>.<p>Djokovic grew increasingly animated when he missed out a string of break points early in the fourth set, but he eventually landed the decisive blow in the seventh game when Carreno Busta pushed a forehand wide.</p>.<p>"It was really anybody's game. It was so close. He had his chances. I had my chances. It was a very even match even though it was three sets to one," said Djokovic.</p>.<p>Tsitsipas made his second Grand Slam semi-final with a straight-sets win over 13th seed Andrey Rublev, avenging last month's loss to the Russian in the Hamburg final.</p>.<p>The Greek fifth seed downed Rublev 7-5, 6-2, 6-3 to match his breakout run at the 2019 Australian Open.</p>.<p>"I'm expecting since a young age to potentially triumph at these Grand Slams. I'm happy that I'm able to be in a position where I am today," said Tsitsipas. "I'm chasing something spectacular."</p>.<p>"Despite not having a good start and being a break down, I remembered what a big fighter I am," he added.</p>.<p>"It's also about fighting and trying to find solutions in difficult moments. I managed to put my brain to work."</p>.<p>Tsitsipas, 22, has now won 15 successive sets at the tournament having been two sets down to Jaume Munar in the opening round.</p>.<p>However that streak looked in peril when Rublev, also making his first French Open quarter-final appearance, served for the opening set at 5-4.</p>.<p>A loose game from Rublev allowed Tsitsipas to recover and he rattled off four in a row to take the lead.</p>.<p>Tsitsipas, last year's ATP Finals champion, dominated the second set to leave Rublev on the brink, profiting from a favourable net cord to break at 3-2 after carving the opening following a 28-shot rally.</p>.<p>Only Djokovic has won more than Rublev's three titles in 2020, but the world number 15 was powerless to stop a supreme Tsitsipas who closed out victory inside two hours.</p>.<p>Tsitsipas crunched 35 winners and made just 17 unforced errors. He holds a 2-3 record against Djokovic going into Friday's encounter.</p>.<p>"I expect a really tough match, a tough challenge for both of us. This is what you expect in the semi-finals of a Grand Slam," said Djokovic.</p>.<p>"He's been playing the tennis of his life in the last 12 months."</p>
<p>Novak Djokovic said he was "feeling okay" after overcoming neck and shoulder troubles to defeat Pablo Carreno Busta on Wednesday and set up a French Open semi-final showdown with Stefanos Tsitsipas.</p>.<p>Djokovic beat Spanish 17th seed Carreno Busta 4-6, 6-2, 6-3, 6-4 to reach the last four of a major for the 38th time as he chases a second French Open and 18th Grand Slam title.</p>.<p>However, the world number one required treatment on his upper left arm after dropping his first set of the tournament on a chilly autumn evening in Paris.</p>.<p>"I definitely didn't feel great coming onto the court today, a few things happened in the warm-up," said Djokovic.</p>.<p>"I had some neck issues and some shoulder issues. I don't really want to get too much into it.</p>.<p>"I'm feeling okay, I'm still in the tournament so I don't want to reveal too much. As the match went on, I felt better, didn't feel as much pain."</p>.<p>The Serb now sits two wins away from becoming the first man in half a century -- and only the third in history -- to win all four Slams twice.</p>.<p>His only defeat in 37 matches this year came to Carreno Busta following his disqualification at the US Open for an angry swipe of a ball which hit a female line judge squarely in the throat.</p>.<p>Djokovic again looked vulnerable against Carreno Busta, who twice had chances to break in the second set but could not capitalise, instead losing his own serve on two occasions.</p>.<p>"For a set and a half he was the better player, dictating the play," said Djokovic.</p>.<p>The Serb unleashed a primal roar having fended off two break points in the first game of the third set and appeared in control at 3-0 until Carreno Busta clawed back to 3-all.</p>.<p>But the top seed reclaimed the initiative with another break at 4-3 on his way to taking the third set.</p>.<p>Djokovic grew increasingly animated when he missed out a string of break points early in the fourth set, but he eventually landed the decisive blow in the seventh game when Carreno Busta pushed a forehand wide.</p>.<p>"It was really anybody's game. It was so close. He had his chances. I had my chances. It was a very even match even though it was three sets to one," said Djokovic.</p>.<p>Tsitsipas made his second Grand Slam semi-final with a straight-sets win over 13th seed Andrey Rublev, avenging last month's loss to the Russian in the Hamburg final.</p>.<p>The Greek fifth seed downed Rublev 7-5, 6-2, 6-3 to match his breakout run at the 2019 Australian Open.</p>.<p>"I'm expecting since a young age to potentially triumph at these Grand Slams. I'm happy that I'm able to be in a position where I am today," said Tsitsipas. "I'm chasing something spectacular."</p>.<p>"Despite not having a good start and being a break down, I remembered what a big fighter I am," he added.</p>.<p>"It's also about fighting and trying to find solutions in difficult moments. I managed to put my brain to work."</p>.<p>Tsitsipas, 22, has now won 15 successive sets at the tournament having been two sets down to Jaume Munar in the opening round.</p>.<p>However that streak looked in peril when Rublev, also making his first French Open quarter-final appearance, served for the opening set at 5-4.</p>.<p>A loose game from Rublev allowed Tsitsipas to recover and he rattled off four in a row to take the lead.</p>.<p>Tsitsipas, last year's ATP Finals champion, dominated the second set to leave Rublev on the brink, profiting from a favourable net cord to break at 3-2 after carving the opening following a 28-shot rally.</p>.<p>Only Djokovic has won more than Rublev's three titles in 2020, but the world number 15 was powerless to stop a supreme Tsitsipas who closed out victory inside two hours.</p>.<p>Tsitsipas crunched 35 winners and made just 17 unforced errors. He holds a 2-3 record against Djokovic going into Friday's encounter.</p>.<p>"I expect a really tough match, a tough challenge for both of us. This is what you expect in the semi-finals of a Grand Slam," said Djokovic.</p>.<p>"He's been playing the tennis of his life in the last 12 months."</p>