Roger Federer shrugged off dropping the first set against journeyman Denis Istomin on Thursday before hitting back to win 3-6, 6-3, 6-4 and reach the Swiss Indoors quarter-finals.
But the 33-year-old admitted his start had been slow.
It was the top seed and
five-time champion's 53rd career win at his hometown event, the place
where he got his start in the sport as a ballboy two decades ago.
He
now stands at a perfect 6-0 over world number 55 Istomin, who gave
Federer plenty of trouble during their one-hour, 48-minute meeting.
Federer's win kept up the pressure on Novak Djokovic as the Swiss takes aim at a possible return to the year-end world number one ranking currently held by the Serb.
"I was lacking rhythm in first set, it was close but he played well when he had to. He served well on the break point he faced.
"It was tough to lose that set but it was important to bounce back in the second set and get my teeth into the match.
"In
the third I got the upper hand and was moving him around the baseline. I
was more consistent, it just took awhile to make the breakthrough.
"In
the end it was a tough and good match for me. The key was to clears up
my game, get the win and give myself an opportunity for tomorrow."
Federer, who won his first-round
match in 47 minutes, lost the opening set on a break as Istomin landed a
return at his feet for a crucial 4-2 lead.
The
second set momentum finally turned for Federer, who fired three love
games and lost just two points on serve as he levelled with a forehand
winner to the corner on set point.
In
the third, the Swiss was frustrated by stubborn Istomin defence, with
Federer missing on four break points in the opening game before finally
breaking for 2-1 on the eighth break point of the set, a passing winner.
Federer
completed his comeback with a sixth ace on match point to advance into a
quarter-final against fifth seed Grigor Dimitrov, who beat
Canadian Vasek Pospisil, a 2013 semi-finalist, 6-2, 6-2.
Federer claimed the title in 2006 (d. Gonzalez), '07 (d. Nieminen), '08
(d. Nalbandian), '10 (d. Djokovic) and '11 (d. Nishikori). He finished
runner-up to Juan Martin del Potro in the past two years.
Date: 23rd October 2014, Source: AFP
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