FEDERER FLIES THROUGH ANOTHER LONDON MATCH, HEADING STRAIGHT TOWARD SEMIFINALS BY RICKY DIMON

Written by: on 11th November 2014
ATP World Tour Finals
FEDERER FLIES THROUGH ANOTHER LONDON MATCH, HEADING STRAIGHT TOWARD SEMIFINALS BY RICKY DIMON

epa04485471 Switzerland's Roger Federer returns to Japan's Kei Nishikori at the ATP World Tour Finals mens tennis tournament at the O2 Arena in London, Britain, 11 November 2014. EPA/ANDY RAIN  |

Roger Federer may be the oldest participant at the World Tour Finals, but he sure is not looking like it. Or maybe he is, and age–plus experience–is an advantage.

 

Japan’s Kei Nishikori serves to Switzerland’s Roger Federer at the ATP World Tour Finals mens tennis tournament at the O2 Arena in London, Britain, 11 November 2014. EPA/ANDY RAIN

Kei Nishikori sure knows it’s not a disadvantage after going down to Federer 6-3, 6-2 in just one hour and nine minutes on Tuesday afternoon. Two days after beating Milos Raonic in straight sets, Federer had no trouble improving to 2-0 in round-robin competition in London.

 

“I never feel that [Federer] is 33,” Nishikori explained. “He looks still young and playing amazing tennis. I think the age doesn’t matter right now.”

 

Nishikori had fleeting chance to get ahead early in the match, but Federer erased a break point with an ace out wide at 30-40 and the Japanese underdog sent a forehand long on his second opportunity. Unable to shake that disappointment, Nishikori promptly dropped serve in the next game. Federer set up break point with a brilliant forehand passing shot and converted it thanks to another forehand winner. Nishikori fought off a break point at 1-4 on a well-placed backhand volley to stay within striking distance, but his opponent wrapped up the first set with little trouble at 5-3.

 

Federer seized complete control when he broke at 1-1 in the second on another forehand error by Nishikori. From there the Swiss poured it on against his reeling adversary. He benefited from a double-fault on break point at 2-4 and closed out the proceedings on serve at 4-2. Federer fought off one last break point with a service winner at 30-40 before getting the job done two points later.

The world No. 2 finished with 17 winners and 18 unforced errors. Playing aggressive tennis, Federer went to to net 17 times and kept Nishikori on his heels despite winning only seven of those net points. Nishikori recorded 15 winners and 30 errors–16 off the backhand side.

Switzerland’s Roger Federer returns to Japan’s Kei Nishikori at the ATP World Tour Finals mens tennis tournament at the O2 Arena in London, Britain, 11 November 2014. EPA/ANDY RAIN

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

“I’m happy after two matches I’m standing here with two wins,” said Federer, who will officially clinch a spot in the semifinals if the Andy Murray vs. Milos Raonic result on Tuesday night is anything other than a Murray straight-set win. “It’s very positive. Usually if you do win in straight sets twice, things look very, very good.”

 

“He took the important points,” Nishikori noted. “All the important points. I didn’t play really bad, but I wasn’t really consistent.”

 

Nishikori, who beat Murray on Sunday while Federer got the best of Murray, will face Raonic on Thursday. That will be a virtual quarterfinal match if Raonic defeats Murray and both men head into the showdown with 1-1 records.

 

Ricky contributes to 10sballs.com and also maintains his own tennis website, The Grandstand.

 

 

Editors Note : Roger Federer is indeed the oldest chap in the singles. But we might still be saying that in 10 years. But in doubles the oldest in the tourney goes to Daniel ” I change partners annually ” Nestor of Canada. We noticed. He usually dumps a partner at all the wrong time, then He Has no synergy with partner just saying. It’s that time of year when the doubles dance begins. It’s change partners at the square dance.

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