Showing posts with label battle. Show all posts
Showing posts with label battle. Show all posts

Thursday, January 19, 2012

Tomic outlasts Verdasco in epic five-set battle

Updated January 17, 2012 00:29:40

Bernard Tomic confessed to deliberately playing dead while drawing inspiration from Lleyton Hewitt to reach the Australian Open second round with a mighty comeback win.

The boom teenager defied all odds, predictions and soaring mercury to rally from two sets down to oust Spanish ironman and 2009 semi-finalist Fernando Verdasco 4-6, 6-7 (7-3), 6-4, 6-2, 7-5 in four hours and 11 minutes.

Tomic's reward for winning his longest-ever match is a clash on Wednesday with American Sam Querrey - and a possible fourth-round showdown with 16-times grand slam champion Roger Federer.

The 19-year-old Wimbledon quarter-finalist looked down and out after falling behind two sets to love.

But backing his vastly-improved fitness, Tomic admitted to foxing his seasoned opponent early in the third set.

"I had a feeling he knew I was going to go away. I eased off and seemed (like) I didn't care," Tomic said.

"He thought he was going to win that third set and when the right time came, I broke him.

"I knew if I lifted my game early, he would have lifted as well and he wouldn't have let go.

"I pretended a little bit in the first few games in that third set to not be there as mentally, but in a way to still be there."

Verdasco, who cried ill after the match, said it was easy for Tomic to claim such tactics in victory.

But nothing could detract from Tomic's day in the sun as he carried the hopes of a nation as Australian number one at Melbourne Park for the first time.

"It's hard, but I'm learning to deal with it. I'm having fun," he said.

"Today wasn't fun. It was torture.

"I don't know how I won but I'm the happiest person alive."

Darren Cahill, Verdasco's former coach and ex-mentor of Hewitt and Andre Agassi, summed up the prevailing mood after Tomic silenced his doubters.

"Stunning effort from Bernie. Gave him no chance after dropping a tough 1st set, let alone going down 2 sets. Well done young fella!" Cahill tweeted.

As a wide-eyed, ambitious 12-year-old, Tomic famously declared he wanted the serve of Goran Ivanisevic, the mind of Pete Sampras, the groundstrokes of Federer and the heart of Hewitt.

On Monday, after displaying Hewitt's fighting qualities, the world number 38 also admitted to drawing on his younger days growing up in Queensland watching Australia's former world number one snatching so many victories from the jaws of defeat.

"(He) did the impossible, turned around a match in this situation," Tomic said.

"You learn from a player that's been number one in the world. Any player that has been number one in the world, you can pick up the best info from them.

"Lleyton never gives up. That's one of the reasons he got to number one.

"I had it in me today. I played a good tennis match and believed in myself as much as I could. That got me through it."

Tomic had requested a day-time encounter for his meeting with "one of the fittest players in the world", believing a night match in heavier conditions would play into the hands of the claycourt specialist.

But as the temperate rose to the mid-30s, Tomic began to regret his decision.

"Silly me," he said.

"I didn't know that the heat was going to be like this.

"It's the first day in the last few months where it's actually been this hot. I chose the wrong time to play. But lucky I won.

"Had I not done that fitness the last two, three months, there's no way mentally you can be out there in that heat and turn around in a match like that and win.

"It was all fitness, the way I've been preparing the last few months. It's all paid off."

AAP

Tags: sport, australian-open, tennis, melbourne-3000, vic, australia

First posted January 16, 2012 16:56:41


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Sunday, April 17, 2011

Nadal survives Murray battle to reach final

Updated April 17, 2011 06:34:00

Rafael Nadal needed to produce one of his most stunning performances on clay on Saturday to edge an injured Andy Murray 6-4, 2-6, 6-1 and book a place in the final of the Monte Carlo Masters.


For the 15th time in the last two decades, a Spaniard will figure in the title match at the Country club, with six-time winner Nadal bidding for a seventh straight title here against compatriot David Ferrer.


The Spanish fourth seed earlier ended the surprise run of Jurgen Melzer 6-3, 6-2, a day after the Austrian had put out Roger Federer.


Nadal needed just shy of three hours to go past Murray, who was reportedly nursing an injured right elbow and who received treatment in the third set after putting up a titanic struggle in the first two sets.


The Spanish world number one did lose his first set in Monte Carlo since the 2009 final against Novak Djokovic, however, as Murray turned in a fighting effort.


Nadal has now won 36 straight matches in the principality heading into his clash with Ferrer, who he has beaten 11 times in 15 encounters.


Murray fought a 65-minute opening set, going down in the end but rallying well in the second with an attacking game that left Nadal puzzled as to the best response.


Murray won a marathon 19-minute game, saving five break points for a 3-1 lead and finally levelling the match after a huge effort.


But as what was reported as a pre-match pain-killing injection began to wear off, Murray's level dropped, with Nadal able to close out a hard-fought win with little resistance in the deciding set.


Ferrer doused cold water on Melzer's dream run after the Austrian had stunned Federer in the quarter-finals.


"Maybe the key was in my serve," said Ferrer.


"I played very consistent and didn't make mistakes. I was very regular and very focused all the match. I'm very pleased to be in the finals of a Masters 1000."


Ferrer was playing a Monte Carlo semi-final for the second straight year.


Melzer, seventh on the ATP, was the first Austrian to reach the semis here since Thomas Muster won the title 15 years ago.


"I think out of the first five games, I should have won all five of them," said Melzer.


"You could see in the beginning he didn't feel comfortable at all.


"The longer the match went on, the more comfortable he felt and the discomfort I felt," said the Austrian, who said the neck pain that forced him off court for treatment against Federer was not a problem on Saturday.


"If you're in the semi-finals, you want to win no matter who you beat the day before."


The Austrian began strongly with a break but lost his way as Ferrer's steady game paid dividends to frustrate his opponent.


Melzer lost the first set in 38 minutes and went down two breaks in the second.


He saved a match point before Ferrer advanced on his second chance from a Melzer unforced error.


- AFP


First posted April 17, 2011 06:10:00


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