
Monfils triumphed 6-1, 6-4, 6-3
and posted his first win on clay over Federer, who decided to play
despite the injury that forced him to pull out of the title match at the
ATP World Tour Finals last Sunday.
It was a stark contrast to Federer's superb display in London last week, where he eased past opponents but hurt his back during his semifinal victory over Davis Cup teammate Stan Wawrinka. Federer, however, said switching from hard court to clay and being short of practice was the main reason for his loss, rather than pain.
''Clearly I did feel, not having
hit and played and moved at all for five days, and Gael did play well,''
he said. ''It's not like I couldn't play at all. It was a proper
match, and he was the better player at the end.''
''I would be ready to do that if
ever it's the best choice,'' the 33-year-old said. ''As I said before,
I'm waiting for better things this weekend. I'm coming out of the match
without any pain, which is good, too. It was not a five setter with me
totally exhausted.''
Earlier, Wawrinka had put the Swiss ahead by beating Jo-Wilfried Tsonga 6-1, 3-6, 6-3, 6-2.
Monfils
sealed his win in less than two hours on his first match point with a
backhand down the line, getting a measure of revenge after his tough
loss to the Swiss in the quarterfinals at the U.S. Open, when the
Frenchman lost in five sets after going up two sets to one and failing
to convert two match points.
If Federer plays the doubles, he will be teaming up with Wawrinka. The
Australian Open champion started strong against Tsonga and overcame a
second-set lapse by regaining control of the opening singles match with
an aggressive display that paid off.
Wawrinka, who scored 25 points at
the net, closed out the match with a winning volley, then pointed to
his head with his index finger, his trademark celebration gesture.
''My strength is playing aggressive, I could not win that match staying on the baseline,'' he said. ''I had to come forward.''
Wawrinka
took control of rallies with his deep groundstrokes. He converted his
second break point for a 3-1 lead as he won eight consecutive points and
took the Frenchman's serve again.
Wawrinka did not react but his
play dropped off while Tsonga started to serve better. He put the Swiss
under pressure in the fourth game with a series of good returns and
Wawrinka handed him the break with a double fault.
Tsonga
stayed in control to level the tie at one set apiece but showed his
nerves in the sixth game of the third set, hitting three unforced errors
including a double fault to drop his serve.
The
fourth-ranked Swiss continued to put Tsonga on the back foot by taking
all the risks on his opponent's second serve and broke immediately with
another superb backhand at the start of the fourth set. He frustrated
Tsonga with a series of backhand and forehand winners in the seventh
game as the Frenchman dropped his serve again.
"I was confident. I showed him on the court that I was better than he was," said Wawrinka.
Tsonga agreed with his rival.
Date: 21st November 2014, Source: AP
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