Thursday 27 January 2011

Djokovic Semi Final - Match reports

Novak Djokovic
Djokovic is trying to win the second Grand Slam title of his career

Novak Djokovic claimed his second successive Grand Slam semi-final win over reigning champion Roger Federer to reach the final of the Australian Open.

The Serb, who beat Federer at the US Open in September, saw off the 16-time Grand Slam champion 7-6 (7-3) 7-5 6-4 in the first semi-final in Melbourne.

Andy Murray will play David Ferrer in the second semi at 0830 GMT on Friday.

And for the first time since Australia in 2008, a Grand Slam final will not feature Roger Federer or Rafael Nadal.

That was the year that Djokovic beat Jo-Wilfried Tsonga to win his only major title to date, and then too he had ended Federer's hopes in the semi-finals.

This latest defeat ends a run of superb form from Federer that followed his five-set loss to Djokovic in New York four months ago, and included victory at the Tour Finals in London and in Doha at the start of this year. Djokovic made a nervous start to Thursday's match, double-faulting twice as he offered up a break point in the opening game only to gather himself and see it off with a fine forehand.

The next 45 minutes saw precious little to choose between either man as both dominated on serve in a high-quality battle that had the packed night-time crowd enthralled on Rod Laver Arena.


It was Djokovic who made the initial breakthrough as he took command in the tie-break, grabbing the first mini-break at 2-1 and consolidating it with another after a heavy forehand into the corner for 5-2.

The third seed netted a backhand on his first set point but Federer returned the compliment on the following point, and Djokovic headed to the chair to the sound of the large Serb contingent celebrating noisily.

If the first set had been an exhibition of serving dominance, the second would be the complete opposite.
Djokovic let out a huge roar when he converted his first break point of the match at 1-1, successive backhand errors letting Federer down, and the Swiss appeared rattled as he muttered to umpire Enric Molina at the changeover about the Serb's team coaching him from the stands .

Now a set and a break down, the four-time Australian Open champion needed to find a way back into the match but, in the event, Djokovic handed it to him with a sloppy game that gave the break straight back for 2-2.

And the momentum shifted, seemingly definitively, in Federer's favour when he played a superb defensive point to break once again for a 4-2 lead, before seeing off two more break points in the following game - the second with the bravest of lob volleys that left Djokovic sprawled on the court.

But the 29-year-old Swiss failed to serve out the set two games later after Djokovic chased down a poor drop shot and guided a forehand down the line to break back, and incredibly he then regained his earlier advantage by breaking for the third time when Federer sliced a backhand into the bottom of the net.

There was to be no wavering when Djokovic served for the set and he sealed it with a blistering backhand winner down the line, prompting Federer to head disconsolately off court, presumably as much to clear his head as take advantage of a bathroom break.

It apparently had some effect as the world number two returned to launch another assault on the Djokovic serve, but the Serb staved off three break points with some heavy serving and then set about finishing the job.
Again it was the Federer backhand that let him down when successive errors on that side gave Djokovic a potentially decisive break at 2-1, but the Swiss grabbed a lifeline to level at 4-4 when a net cord sat up for him to steer away a forehand winner.

The serving superiority of the first set was long forgotten by now, though, and Djokovic's breathless movement behind the baseline earned him three break points at 0-40 in the next game, with Federer netting a backhand on the third.

After nearly three hours, Djokovic arrived at the moment of truth as he served for the match, overcoming a nervous double-fault at the start and two missed opportunities on match points to convert his third with a service winner.

Courtesy: BBC


The No. 2 seed followed the No. 1 seed out of the Australian Open as Roger Federer was beaten 7-6(3) 7-5 6-4 by Novak Djokovic in their semi-final.

Just 24 hours after Rafael Nadal was toppled by David Ferrer, Federer was outfought and outthought by a player who beat the Swiss great at the same stage of last year's US Open.

Djokovic has rebuilt his game after a sticky patch towards the end of 2009 and he is reaping the benefits as he hit cleanly on both wings and countered everything Federer threw at him.

Federer came out on the front foot, standing inside the baseline on the Djokovic serve, and he worked a break point in the opening game. Djokovic did not help his cause by serving two double faults, but he threw down a marker by holding serve thanks to some power hitting on his forehand wing.

The first set saw just one break point, in the opening game, as both players dominated behind their own serves and the set went to a breaker. Djokovic secured the first minibreak when taking advantage of a Federer backhand flying high in the air off the top of the net for an easy put-away. The slice of luck enabled Djokovic to press home his advantage and he edged a tight first set when Federer threw a backhand into the net.


Roger Federer's backhand is a thing of beauty, but it let him down against Djokovic

If Djokovic needed a lift, taking the first set provided it and he worked an immediate break in the second when a wild Federer backhand handed the Serb the opening.

Federer hit back immediately, changing tactics by dropping deeper behind the baseline and hitting more topspin. For a time it worked as he dominated Djokovic to take a 4-2 lead. Federer saved a break point at 4-2 with a sublime lob volley and it appeared the 16-time slam winner had rode out the storm, but he dropped serve when serving for the second set. The momentum gathered behind Djokovic once again and at 5-5 he worked three break points. He did not need to force the issue as Federer sent a backhand slice into the bottom of the net and he then produced a brilliant winner of his own to open up a two-set lead.

Federer made one last stand when working three break points in the opening game of the third set, but on each occasion Djokovic found an answer and in the next game he secured a break, again thanks to the Federer backhand breaking down with a wild shot over the baseline.

The Swiss master attempted to change tactics by chipping and charging on the Djokovic serve and he broke back in the eighth game. But it proved to be a false dawn as four unforced errors from the Federer racket handed the Serb an immediate break back and he held his nerve, despite squandering two match points, to book his place in the final.

Djokovic has one grand slam to his name, the Australian Open of 2008, and he beat Federer in the semi-finals of that year as well.

Courtesy: ESPN

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