Federer to meet Djokovic in Dubai final
TENNIS: DUBAI, Feb 26 (AFP) - Roger Federer earned a chance of
regaining one of his titles, and an early revenge upon Novak Djokovic,
by reaching the final of the Dubai Open on Friday.
Federer, without a Grand Slam title for the first time in eight
years, overcame Richard Gasquet, the gifted Frenchman who once beat him
as a teenager, by 6-2, 7-5 to earn a second meeting with Djokovic inside
four weeks.
It was the Serbian who beat the Swiss maestro last month in Melbourne
before making off with his Australian Open title, and it is Djokovic who
holds the title here as well.
"It's a huge obstacle to play Novak," admitted Federer, who may
nevertheless have been encouraged by Djokovic's struggles in getting
past Tomas Berdych, the man who beat him at Wimbledon but who retired
with a thigh injury in the final set.
Djokovic, playing in hot temperatures, described his own performance
as a "catastrophe", even though there was no doubting his desire and
determination as he survived by a scoreline of 6-7 (5-7), 6-2, 4-2,
30-love retired.
Federer by contrast played in the cool of the evening, when the air
was thicker and the ball less fiery, which probably helped the
top-seeded former champion to produce moments of beautifully controlled
magic.
Federer also had an extra gear, which became evident only when
Gasquet's level rose in the second set, thanks to fewer unforced errors
and improved rhythm with some flamboyant ground strokes.
They helped the former world number seven to take a 5-3 lead, but
they also goaded Federer into a trampling performance in the next four
games, during which he allowed Gasquet only four more points.
He then celebrated victory with a well-practised wave and a
half-smile which suggested his mind might already be on what was still
to come.
The crowd was disappointed for many of them thought Gasquet could
take it to a decider, but those were not entirely the Frenchman's
sentiments.
"I arrived with no practice, and with a shoulder injury, so I'm
playing better and better," he said.
Djokovic by contrast described his performance as "the worst of the
year," adding that he thought he "was just fortunate to go through."
He had problems with his footwork, laboured throughout the first set,
and his ground strokes, particularly on the backhand side let him down
far more often than usual.
But the Serb's desire to win and his serve did not. Nor did the
intensity of his support from a gaggle of noisy expatriates. Once they
started cheering before Berdych had completed an attempt to run the ball
down, causing the Czech to complain, and prompting the umpire to tell
them "please don't shout." Djokovic needed all this passion to prevent
Berdych breaking back at 15-40 in the fifth game of the second set, and
this escape by the champion probably quashed the the third seed's last
real hopes.
|