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Federer
masters Roddick again at US Open tennis
NEW YORK—Roger Federer maintained his dominance over Andy Roddick to
reach the semi-finals of the US Open on Wednesday, keeping alive his bid
to win four titles in a row in New York.
The top seed and defending champion defeated the home favourite 7-6
(7/5), 7-6 (7/4), 6-2 in an intense night-time encounter that turned on
two tie-breaks which brought out the brilliant best from the world’s top
player.
Federer made it 26 wins in a row at the US Open and he is now just two
games away from emulating the four-in-a-row feat of Bill Tilden in the
1920s. In Saturday’s semi-finals, the Swiss star will play fourth seed
Nikolay Davydenko of Russia, against whom he has a 9-0 winning record.
Davydenko, who lost to Federer in last year’s semi-final in New York,
defeated Germany’s Tommy Haas 6-3, 6-3, 6-4 sending him into the last
four as the only player not to have dropped a set.
Roddick’s defeat means that the winless stretch for American men in
Grand Slam tournaments extends to 16, one short of the record between
1984 and 1989.
Both Federer and Roddick were dressed in black for their
much-anticipated prime-time showdown for which the world No.1 was the
hot favourite having won 13 of their 14 encounters, including a four-set
win in last year’s final.
Roddick was pumped up for the challenge and with his serve operating at
full blast, the first set raced towards a tie-break. Federer made the
mini-break with a marvellous backhand pass and then he blasted down an
ace on set point.
Roddick had the first break point in the match for either man in the
eighth game of the second set but he hit long on a backhand service
return.
The American, only a year younger than Federer at 25 but with just one
Grand Slam title to Federer’s 11, was taking most of the initiatives and
was comfortable on his own serve.
But once again he came off second best in the tie-break, Federer hitting
a fabulous blocked return winner off a 140 mph Roddick first serve to
grab the mini-break and then blasting a service winner to go two sets
ahead.
Roddick had a Swiss mountain to climb and the task became well-nigh
impossible when Federer finally crafted two break points in the sixth
game of the third set and he gleefully converted the second to lead 4-2.
Federer then pocketed the next two games against an exasperated Roddick
to finish off the match in two hours two minutes.
The 26-year-old Davydenko never looked like losing his perfect set
record against a subdued Haas, who had endured two tough five-setters in
a row to get into the last eight. The lightning-quick Russian rapidly
imposed his relentless rhythm on the German, who found himself under
increasing pressure and started making a string of unforced errors.
Haas was two sets down in no time and it was only in the third set when
he started mixing up his game that he managed to really compete. The
players exchanged four breaks of serve in a row from 2-2, but when
Davydenko made it five breaks in a row to lead 5-4, Haas reacted with
frustration by blasting a ball out of the stadium.
A few minutes later it was all over as Davydenko comfortably closed out
the match on serve. Haas paid tribute to the Russian, saying that he had
dominated the match with his accurate and penetrating groundstrokes.
“At times he makes you try to do too much. That got to me mentally.
Every time I tried to do something different he came up with an answer.
I don’t know how he does it,” he said.
Davydenko has now lost just 39 games in reaching the semi-finals of a
Grand Slam event for the fourth time - twice at the French Open in 2005
and 2007 along with his last-four appearance in New York last year.
The two remaining quarter-finals, scheduled for Thursday, will send
third seeded Novak Djokovic of Serbia against Spanish veteran Carlos
Moya and Spain’s David Ferrer against Juan Ignacio Chela of
Argentina.—Agencies |