Novak Djokovic powered past Aljaz Bedene 6-3 6-3 6-2 on Saturday (NZ time) with a near flawless performance to reach the French Open fourth round and stay firmly on course to challenge for a record-equalling 21st Grand Slam triumph.
The 35-year-old world No. 1, who was on court for less than two hours, next plays 15th seed Diego Schwartzmann of Argentina and if victorious could face 13-times winner Rafael Nadal in what would be a mouth-watering last eight clash.
"It's not possible to play perfectly but to strive to play close to perfection," Djokovic said in an on-court interview.
"I want to play my characteristic game, my aggressive game. It is not always possible but today it was very good."
Djokovic's next opponent is a claycourt specialist and the Serbian warned of Schwartzmann's speed and work ethic although the top seed has won all six of their previous encounters.
"He is one of the quickest players on tour. His best results in his career came on clay," Djokovic told a news conference later."Playing against him you always expect the ball to come back. I expect a physical battle."
However, Djokovic had an easy match against Slovenian Bedene, ranked 195th in the world after an eight-month layoff and return to action in March, who was no match for the 35-year-old's power and near-flawless service games.
The Serbian wasted three break points at 2-1 in the first set but quickly got another chance to breeze through it in just over 30 minutes.
He got two more breaks in the second to clinch it as quickly as the first with Bedene failing to carve out a break chance in the match, and winning just five points on Djokovic's serve in the first two sets.
The third set went in similar fashion with Djokovic breaking early and Bedene, who made twice as many unforced errors as his opponent, failed to respond before the top seed triumphed when the Slovenian netted a forehand after an hour and 44 minutes.
Nadal hammered Dutch 26th seed Botic van de Zandschulp 6-3 6-2 6-4 in his third round tie.
Nadal has 13 Roland Garros titles among his 21 majors - the highest among men - but the Spaniard was denied last year, when he went down in the semi-finals to eventual champion Djokovic.
He will take on Canadian ninth seed Felix Auger-Aliassime before their potential clash in the last eight.
Van de Zandschulp began the match on a strong footing, breaking Nadal's serve in the first game, but the Spaniard's delivery looked almost impregnable for the remainder of the contest on Court Suzanne Lenglen.
In his first career meeting against the Dutchman, Nadal dictated terms from way behind the baseline, absorbing his opponent's power and then bringing out his venomous forehand when required.
Van de Zandschulp, currently at a career-high ranking of 29th, staged a brief fightback in the third set when he won three games in a row from 4-0 down but Nadal, who will turn 36 next week, had the cushion to not be threatened.
Nadal broke the 26-year-old's service twice in each of the three sets, hit 25 winners while keeping a lid on his unforced errors. The left-hander closed out the contest with an overhead smash down the middle on his second match point.
"I had my chance with a break point for 5-0 then match was over but he made a great second serve," Nadal said on court. "Then I played a bad game with my serve and he started to play aggressive and you feel a bit of nerves to finish the match.
"Straight sets, it was my best match of the tournament for two sets and a half."
Reuters.