Roger Federer blew away Novak Djokovic
in a fearsome Shanghai Masters performance Saturday to end the Serb's
incredible winning streak in China and set up a final with Gilles Simon.
As well as raising
expectations of 33-year-old Federer's 81st career title, the resounding
victory will also restore him as world number two, displacing his great
rival Rafael Nadal.
"It was a great match, I agree," said Federer, who will play for his 81st tour-level title on Sunday. "I think I played very well. There was nothing in the game today that wasn't working. I think it was a high-level match. I'm unbelievably happy with the way it went."
Both
players were looking to unnerve each other early on, with Djokovic
attempting riskier groundstrokes to counter Federer confronting him at
the net.
Every point was greeted with exuberant cheers in Shanghai's packed Qizhong Tennis Center, and the stadium erupted when Federer broke serve on his second break point in the fifth game.
Federer
carried his ruthless approach into the early stages of the second set,
breaking in the first game with a lifting groundstroke that was beyond
Djokovic.
A brilliant attacking display
from the 17-time Grand Slam winner, who served with aggression and spent
much of his time at the net, unsettled the world number one for a 6-4,
6-4 win.
Federer faced and saved only one break point the entire match, hit 35 winners, 7 aces, and won 20 of 35 points at the net.
"It was a great match, I agree," said Federer, who will play for his 81st tour-level title on Sunday. "I think I played very well. There was nothing in the game today that wasn't working. I think it was a high-level match. I'm unbelievably happy with the way it went."
Djokovic, who was the two-time
defending champion in Shanghai and clinched his fifth China Open title
last week, was gunning for his 29th consecutive win on Chinese soil in
his first match with Federer since this year's epic Wimbledon final.
Every point was greeted with exuberant cheers in Shanghai's packed Qizhong Tennis Center, and the stadium erupted when Federer broke serve on his second break point in the fifth game.
Djokovic saved the first break
point by finding a way past Federer - who was again at the net - but
gave away his serve with a weak backhand slice moments later.
He
then earned his sole break point of the set in the next game, which
Federer saved. The Swiss then produced a perfect serving game at his
next opportunity, firing four successive aces to march to a 5-3 lead
before sealing the set 6-4.
Djokovic staged a valiant
attempt to break as he was losing 3-5 with some incredible net play as
the pair tussled at deuce. But Federer recovered and claimed the set and
match in one hour 36 minutes.
Federer
improved to 19-17 against Djokovic with the result, and will overtake
Nadal, who is suffering appendix problems, to claim second place in the
rankings next week.
"He played from first to last point a very, very good match," a dejected Djokovic said.
"It's just that he played everything he wanted to play. He played the
perfect match. I think he's going to tell you how he felt, but that's
how I felt he played. He played an amazing match."
"This tonight is definitely one of the best matches he has played against me, that's for sure."
Federer's best showing at the
Masters 1000 event was as runner up in 2010, although he did win in
Shanghai when it hosted the Tennis Masters Cup in 2006 and 2007.
Federer said that confronting Djokovic at the net was part of his game-plan.
He will meet Simon in the
decider Sunday, after the Frenchman powered past Feliciano Lopez 6-2,
7-6(1) to reach his first Masters final in six years and seal his
return to the world top 20.
The
world number 29 has only contested one Masters final to date, when he
lost to Andy Murray at Madrid 2008, but he is in good form after also
reaching the last four in Tokyo last week.
Simon beat Australian Open champion Stan Wawrinka and then sixth seed Czech
Tomas Berdych in the Shanghai quarter-finals after taking every game in
the final set.
On Saturday,
the Frenchman picked up where he left off in the quarters, serving up a
masterclass in aggressive play early on, before sealing the match in 80
minutes.
"I really played
what I had to," Simon said. "I was feeling really good from the
baseline. I felt I almost didn't lose one point from the baseline the
whole match."
Date: 11th October 2014, Source: AFP
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