Paris, France (Sports Network) - World No. 1 Novak Djokovic and seven-time champion Rafael Nadal each moved into the fourth round at the French Open. The Australian Open titlist Djokovic picked up career match win number 500 in capping Saturdays festivities on Court Chatrier by dismantling promising 26th-seeded Bulgarian Grigor Dimitrov 6-2, 6-2, 6-3 in a brisk 1 hour, 44 minutes. Dimitrov upset Djokovic an ATP Masters event in Madrid last month. Djokovic reached his first-ever French Open final last year, only to lose to his great rival Nadal in four sets. His fourth-round opponent will be quality German Philipp Kohlschreiber. The third-seeded former No. 1 Nadal got past 27th-seeded flashy Italian shot- maker Fabio Fognini 7-6 (7-5), 6-4, 6-4, also on Chatrier. Nadal, who will turn 27 on Monday and is seeking a fourth straight title at this lone clay-court Grand Slam event, improved to 55-1 lifetime at Roland Garros. His fourth-round opponent will be 13th-seeded rising Japanese Kei Nishikori, who topped 24th-seeded Frenchman Benoit Paire 6-3, 6-7 (3-7), 6-4, 6-1 on a sunny, breezy Day 7. Nishikori is the first Japanese man to reach the fourth round at the French since 1938. In the match of the tournament thus far, 12th-seeded 35-year-old resurgent German Tommy Haas outlasted 19th-seeded American marathon man John Isner 7-5, 7-6 (7-4), 4-6, 6-7 (10-12), 10-8 in 4 hours, 37 minutes. Isner saved 12 match points in a dramatic fourth set, as the towering American battled Haas for 46 points over 31 minutes at one point to survive the stanza. Haas saved a match point against in the fifth and ultimately converted on his 13th match point, serving out the victory to stave off Isner, who fired 27 aces in a gut-wrenching setback. The 6-foot-9 Isner holds the record for the longest-ever tennis match, when he beat Frances Nicolas Mahut in 11 hours, 5 minutes over three days at Wimbledon three years ago. The one-time world No. 2 Haas will face Russian veteran Mikhail Youzhny in the round of 16. Meanwhile, seventh-seeded crowd favorite Richard Gasquet blew past former world No. 3 Russian Nikolay Davydenko 6-4, 6-4, 6-3; the 29th-seeded Youzhny upended eighth-seeded Serb Janko Tipsarevic 6-4, 6-4, 6-3; ninth-seeded Swiss slugger Stan Wawrinka bested 21st-seeded 6-foot-8 Pole Jerzy Janowicz 6-3, 6-7 (2-7), 6-3, 6-3; and a 16th-seeded Kohlschreiber cruised past Romanian Victor Hanescu 6-0, 7-6 (7-0), 6-1. Gasquet and Wawrinka will lock horns in the fourth round. The round of 16 will get underway Sunday, including a match between second- seeded former No. 1 great Roger Federer and 15th-seeded Frenchman Gilles Simon. Federer captured his lone French Open title in 2009 and is a four-time runner- up to Nadal. The 17-time Grand Slam king is the reigning Wimbledon champ. Also on Day 8, fourth-seeded David Ferrer will face 23rd-seeded South African Kevin Anderson, sixth-seeded Frenchman Jo-Wilfried Tsonga will battle Serb Viktor Troicki, and 11th-seeded Spaniard Nicolas Almagro will meet 32nd-seeded fellow Spaniard Tommy Robredo. Stitched Penguins Jerseys . Blackwood, 28, has played the last three seasons in the San Diego Padres system, including the past two summers with Class AA San Antonio of the Texas League. Pittsburgh Penguins Gear . -- Devin Hester is done returning kicks in Chicago. https://www.cheappenguinsjersey.com/ . The Cleveland Indians, Tampa Bay Rays, and Texas Rangers all won on Sunday meaning the Rangers will host the Rays in a play-in game on Monday. Cheap Penguins Jerseys . Aaron Harrison scored a 22 points for Kentucky (6-1), which has won four in a row following a Nov. 12 loss to current No. 1 Michigan State. Julius Randle overcame a scoreless first half and added his sixth double-double in as many games with 14 points and 10 rebounds. Penguins Jerseys China .Y. -- Jayna Hefford scored the winning goal Friday as Canada survived a scare with a 4-3 win over Sweden at the Four Nations womens hockey tournament.TORONTO - As soccer star Christine Sinclair was announced as an inductee to Canadas Walk of Fame on Tuesday, she marvelled that her gutsy performance at the 2012 London Olympics is still being talked about. "For it to still be relevant is still shocking to me," she said. Sinclair joins legendary cancer activist Terry Fox, music producer Bob Ezrin, actor Victor Garber, pianist Oscar Peterson, actor Alan Thicke and human-rights advocates Craig and Marc Kielburger as the latest honorees to join the Walk of Fame. Sinclair — who led Canada to a bronze medal at last summers Olympics — said the Walk of Fame recognition is a reflection of what she and her teammates achieved in London. "It helped put womens soccer on the map," Sinclair, 30, said of Canadas performance. "And for mothers to come up to us after the Olympics and tell us, my daughter wants to play soccer because she thinks she can win a medal at the Olympics — thats incredible." Sinclair, along with the Kielburger brothers, are younger than most Walk of Fame inductees. But she doesnt want it to be a lifetime achievement award. "Ive got a long way to go still," Sinclair said, laughing. Craig Kielburger said his induction only fuels his own advocacy work, founding Free the Children and Me to We. "So much of our work is trying to get young people to follow their passions," said Kielburger, 30. "To be celebrated at a young age for the work that we do, I hope that it sends a symbol to other people not to wait." For 15 years, Canadas Walk of Fame has celebrated Canadians who have excelled in music, sport, film, television, as well as the literary, visual, performing arts, science and innovation, for at least a decade. But while Kielburger doesnt quite fit into that range, it is a reflection of a national identity. "Part of what I think makes us Canadian is our compassion," said Kielburger. "Celebrating that at the highest level is a wonderful ideal, because it shows young Canadians that that is quinteessentially Canadian.dddddddddddd" Dan McGrath, chair of Canadas Walk of Fames board of directors, takes great pleasure in the range of people the Walk recognizes. "Weve got a great balance of Canadians from many disciplines. We dont just focus on just music, or just the arts, and its really people who have made a difference in Canada," he said. Typically, the Canadian Walk of Fame honours one posthumous inductee with the Cineplex Legends award, but this year two are being welcomed: Fox and Peterson. "We decided to have two this year because we wanted to have a special recognition of Terry Fox as part of our 15-year anniversary," said McGrath. "Terry is just an incredible, incredible individual who inspired the entire country." With the introduction of smartphone voting, McGrath said participation for this years slate spiked, with nearly 30,000 Canadians from 130 countries submitting a nomination. Pop star Carly Rae Jepsen of Mission, B.C., was announced as the fourth winner of the Allan Slaight Award, which recognizes young and inspirational Canadians. Past recipients include the rapper Drake and jazz-pop singer Nikki Yanofsky. Jepsen will be performing at the award ceremony on Sept. 21 at the Elgin Theatre. This year also marked the first year the Walk of Fame has awarded the $25,000 RBC Emerging Artist Music Mentorship Prize, which gives up-and-coming musicians an opportunity to learn from established Canadian talent. Last week, Taylor Kurta, a 20-year-old self-taught guitarist and singer from Thornhill, Ont., won the cash prize and the chance to be mentored by Gord Sinclair of the Tragically Hip. The names of this years Walk of Fame inductees will be engraved on stars and displayed with those bearing the names of previous winners along King Street West and Simcoe Street in Toronto. Past inductees include rocker Bryan Adams, TV host Alex Trebek, comedian Phil Hartman and hockey great Bobby Orr. The induction ceremony will be broadcast nationally on Global Television and Slice this fall. ' ' '