Australian Open: Roger Federer beats Mischa Zverev – five best shots
Watch five of the best shots from four-time champion Roger Federer’s 6-1 7-5 6-2 win over unseeded Mischa Zverev in the quarter-finals of the Australian Open.
Watch five of the best shots from four-time champion Roger Federer’s 6-1 7-5 6-2 win over unseeded Mischa Zverev in the quarter-finals of the Australian Open.
Americans work hard for their semi-final berth
Bob Bryan and Mike Bryan are one match away from reaching their 30th Grand Slam doubles championship final (16-13) and their 10th title match at the Australian Open (6-3).
The third-seeded twins, who are bidding to lift their 17th major trophy, knocked out No. 9 seeds Ivan Dodig and Marcel Granollers 7-6(5), 5-7, 6-4 in two hours and 26 minutes for a place in the semi-finals. Dodig and Granollers hit 73 winners, but the Bryans held their nerve on serve. The Americans have an outstanding 112-54 record in tour-level finals.
The Bryans go on to face Spaniards Pablo Carreno Busta and Guillermo Garcia-Lopez, who had a battle to overcome Kiwis Alex Bolt and Bradley Mousley 7-6(4), 4-6, 6-3 in two hours and 13 minutes. Carreno Busta and Garcia-Lopez reached the 2016 US Open final (l. to Jamie Murray/Bruno Soares).
On Wednesday, top seeds Pierre-Hugues Herbert and Nicolas Mahut meet Australians Marc Polmans and Andrew Whittington. Fourth seeds and last year’s ATP Finals champions Henri Kontinen and John Peers face Australians Sam Groth and Chris Guccione.
Australian Open 2017 |
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Venue: Melbourne Park, Melbourne Dates: 16-29 Jan |
Williams v Konta coverage: Wednesday, 02:00 GMT: Live commentary on BBC Radio 5 live sports extra; live text commentary on the BBC Sport website. Wednesday, 16:45 GMT: TV highlights on BBC Two. |
Seventeen-time Grand Slam winner Roger Federer says he did not expect to reach the Australian Open semi-finals after a six-month injury lay-off.
The four-time champion in Melbourne is making his competitive return after last playing at Wimbledon in July.
Federer beat Mischa Zverev 6-1 7-5 6-2 to set up Thursday’s last-four match against fellow Swiss Stan Wawrinka.
“Feeling as good as I am, playing as good as I am, that’s a huge surprise to me,” said the 35-year-old.
“If someone would have told me I’d play in the semis against Stan, never would I have called that one.
“For Stan, yes, but not for me. I honestly didn’t even know a few days ago that he was in my section of the draw or I’m in his section.”
Federer, who has not won a Grand Slam title since triumphing at Wimbledon in 2012, had been sidelined by a knee injury throughout the second half of last year and has slipped from third in the world to 17th.
He played in the non-ranking Hopman Cup in Perth earlier in January, but has come through 18 sets in Melbourne.
“I think winning back-to-back matches in best-of-five sets against quality, great players has surprised me most,” he said.
“Really that’s been for me the big question mark, if I could do that so early in my comeback.
“I felt I was always going to be dangerous on any given day in a match situation. But obviously as the tournament would progress, maybe I would fade away with energy, you know, that kind of stuff.”
Federer holds an 18-3 winning record against Wawrinka, but the 31-year-old will go into the semi-final as the world number four and looking for a second consecutive Grand Slam title after last year’s US Open success.
Federer has won their past two meetings, at the ATP World Tour Finals and in the US Open in 2015, but Wawrinka holds a Grand Slam win against his Davis Cup team-mate, coming in the quarter-finals of the French Open in the same year.
“Against Roger, it’s always special because he’s so good. He’s the best player of all time,” said the three-time Grand Slam winner.
“He has an answer for everything. But I managed to beat him in a Grand Slam, so we’ll see.
“It’s great to see him back at that level. Hopefully I can manage to play a great match.”
All of Wawrinka’s three Grand Slam titles have come since Federer won his last five years ago.
And Wawrinka’s rise to becoming a consistent top-10 player did not come until he was aged 28, and after plenty of help from his fellow Swiss.
“I remember giving Stan a lot of advice on how he should play certain guys,” said Federer.
“Then the day came where he didn’t call me so much any more. He called me less and less.
“I also felt like I didn’t tell him any more, because he created his knowledge, his base, had his team. Only from time to time would I give him advice if he asked me.
“Otherwise I was happy that he was able to let go and go on his own path.”
Roger v Stan: Head-to-head | ||
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35 | Age | 31 |
18 | Head-to-head wins | 3 |
17 | Grand Slams | 3 |
88 | Career titles | 15 |
$98.8m | Career prize money | $27.8m |
British Davis Cup captain Leon Smith on BBC Radio 5 live
It’s a great match because Wawrinka wants to stay back and bludgeon the ball with huge swings and power.
Federer’s job, in the lively conditions, is to take time away from Wawrinka and not allow him to get into that rhythm. Federer has to come forward and test Wawrinka’s passing shots a lot.
That’s important because I don’t think Stan’s the best passer in the world. Roger will be able to come in a lot because Wawrinka does chip and block a lot of first-serve returns.
The way Federer is playing, even though he has missed six months of tennis, I think he’s maybe the slight favourite from what I’ve seen.
Wawrinka records his fourth straight win over Tsonga
Fourth seed Stan Wawrinka remains on course to add to his 2014 Australian Open title by cruising past No. 12 seed Jo-Wilfried Tsonga 7-6(2), 6-4, 6-3 in two hours and 14 minutes on Tuesday.
The Swiss will next play his compatriot Roger Federer, the No. 17 seed and four-time former champion, or Mischa Zverev in the semi-finals.
More to follow…
Australian Open 2017 |
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Venue: Melbourne Park, Melbourne Dates: 16-29 Jan |
Coverage: Daily live commentary on BBC Radio 5 live sports extra; live text on selected matches on the BBC Sport website; TV highlights on BBC Two and online from 21 January. |
Four-time champion Roger Federer coasted into the Australian Open semi-finals with a straight-set defeat of unseeded Mischa Zverev.
The 35-year-old reached the last four in Melbourne for a 13th time with a 6-0 7-5 6-2 win over Zverev, who upset world number one Andy Murray on Sunday.
Federer, seeded 17th as he seeks an 18th Grand Slam title, faces compatriot Stan Wawrinka in the last four.
Fourth seed Wawrinka beat Jo-Wilfried Tsonga 7-6 (7-2) 6-4 6-2.
Wawrinka won his first Grand Slam title at the Australian Open in 2014.
The 31-year-old has since added victories at the French Open in 2015 and the US Open last September, and is rated by many as the favourite in Melbourne following surprise defeats for Murray and Novak Djokovic.
Wawrinka edged a tight opening set against Tsonga, with the pair exchanging words after the tie-break.
“What did you say? You’re the one looking at me and talking to me. What are you looking for?” Wawrinka said to Tsonga in French. “Come on, let it go. Did I look at you once?”
It appeared as though Tsonga was fighting back when he finally broke serve to lead 4-3 in the second set, but Wawrinka snuffed out the danger with two successive breaks for a two-set lead.
An early break was enough to give Wawrinka the final set and he closed out a straightforward win to reach an eighth Grand Slam semi-final.
On the possibility of facing friend and compatriot Federer, he said: “Playing in a semi here is always special – I won my first Grand Slam here in font of amazing fans. If it’s against Roger, I hope a few will cheer for me.”
Asked about the exchange after the first set, Tsonga replied: “Sometimes it happens. We can talk during the game. Nothing special, yeah.
“We just spoke about things that I think is only between him and me, and that’s it.”
Davis Cup, Canada v Great Britain |
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Venue: TD Place Arena, Ottawa Dates: 3-5 Feb |
Coverage: BBC TV, Radio 5 live & BBC Sport website |
World number one Andy Murray has not been included in Britain’s Davis Cup team for next month’s tie in Canada as he recuperates following his shock exit from the Australian Open.
The team, captained by Leon Smith, includes Kyle Edmund, Dan Evans, Jamie Murray and Dominic Inglot.
But Smith said Andy Murray could still feature in Ottawa, from 3-5 February.
“We’ll just keep some dialogue going with Andy and see how he feels in the coming days,” he told BBC Sport.
Murray, who lost to Mischa Zverev in the fourth round in Melbourne, played a packed schedule in the second half of 2016 to reach the top of the world rankings.
Smith added: “Andy has been unbelievable for our team. He gets on great with all the players and the staff and loves playing for Great Britain.
“But he has to look after himself and has played an awful lot of tennis, particularly in the last six months of the year.
“At some point you need to take a break.”
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World number three Milos Raonic is Canada’s leading player, with Peter Polansky and Vasek Pospisil ranked outside the top 100.
“We know the challenge the Canadian team poses,” added Smith.
Andy Murray won 11 of a possible 12 points when he led Britain to their first Davis Cup victory for 79 years in 2015, and the Scot played in two of three ties last year as they reached the semi-finals.
“There’s no let-up, and especially when it’s in Ottawa – where the logistics of it make it challenging,” said Smith.
“There’s a lot of people, whether it’s Tomas Berdych, Kei Nishikori, Roger Federer or Stan Wawrinka, having to look at the schedule and figure out what is best for them to be able to go through the whole year.”
Australian Open 2017 |
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Venue: Melbourne Park, Melbourne Dates: 16-29 Jan |
Coverage: Daily live commentary on BBC Radio 5 live sports extra; live text on selected matches on the BBC Sport website; TV highlights on BBC Two and online. |
As a hugely successful former coach to Grand Slam winners Kim Clijsters and Victoria Azarenka, Wim Fissette was not short of job offers for the 2017 season.
But after British number one Johanna Konta made her interest clear, the softly spoken 36-year-old Belgian spotted a wonderful opportunity.
“From the outside, she looked like a very ambitious, hard-working player with a very strong body,” Fissette recalled on the eve of Konta’s Australian Open quarter-final against Serena Williams (02:00 GMT, Wednesday).
Fisette and Konta started working together a couple of weeks after her rewarding partnership with Esteban Carril reached the end of the road. The two had been unable to agree financial terms for the new year, but after a promising week with Fissette at the Mouratoglou Academy in Nice, Konta had a plan in place for the next stage of her career.
The omens are extremely encouraging. After losing in the semi-finals in Shenzhen in the first week of the year, Konta beat Agnieszka Radwanska for the first time in her career to win the prestigious WTA title in Sydney. She won 10 sets in a row in the process, and has now extended her unbroken run to 18 after four comprehensive victories in Melbourne.
“The more I know about her, the more I like her as a player,” Fissette told BBC Sport.
“She’s physically very strong, she’s got a big serve – for sure top three in women’s tennis – and she’s got big groundstrokes. I think there’s not a weakness in her game, but I do believe she can be better in every aspect.”
What is so impressive is that 2016 should be such a hard act to follow. Konta won her first WTA title in Stanford, and finished as the runner-up in Beijing (one of the four most important tournaments on the women’s tour) having started the year with that semi-final appearance at the Australian Open.
Players often struggle to reproduce the form of a breakthrough season, but Konta is bucking the trend.
“We’ve seen this time and time again on both tours,” says Courtney Nguyen, a senior writer for the WTA Tour.
“You get a big result, you have a breakout season, and the following season you end up suffering a bit of a sophomore slump.
“It can be very difficult playing with that pressure of knowing what can be expected of you. What’s so refreshing with Jo is that’s just not how she sees the world. She takes it all in her stride.”
It is also remarkable how Konta appears to have dealt so well with the end of her partnership with Carril, as well as the untimely death of her mental coach. Juan Coto was a vital component of her team and it was his counsel which helped kick-start her rapid rise through the rankings.
Konta prefers not to reflect publicly on that difficult period, or how she has adjusted so successfully since, which is perhaps a strategy of which Coto would have approved.
The 25-year-old is now very much in demand with the international – as well as the British – media. She conducted six meaty television interviews – including with Australia’s Channel 7 and the US-orientated Tennis Channel – after her fourth-round victory over Ekaterina Makarova.
She is increasingly confident in her conversations, happy to discuss changing her two-month-old nephew’s nappy, and slowly but surely prepared to give a little more insight into her approach.
But will all this be enough to bring her victory over Serena Williams the first time they ever share a court together? Some opponents seem to have lost such a match in their mind before a ball is struck, but Konta is different and will genuinely, and quite rightly, believe she can win.
No other current player can quite compare to the 22-time Grand Slam champion, but Konta was not at all overawed by Serena’s sister Venus in their three meetings. Two of them she won: in the opening round of last year’s Australian Open, and then in the final in Stanford last July.
And Fissette’s very first impressions of Konta are also worth recalling.
“The first time she played a player I was coaching – that was Victoria Azarenka in China – I was very impressed with the attitude she had,” he says.
“She showed respect to the player but she was there to win the match. She came on the court with the belief that she could beat a top player like her and I still see that.
“I believe there will be a day when she will win a Grand Slam.”
Former World No. 1 Andy Roddick has been elected to receive the highest honour in tennis – induction into the International Tennis Hall of Fame.
Of the honour, Roddick stated, “It’s really special. I love this sport and I love being part of it. I’m moved to know that my presence in the sport will be forever part of tennis history, and I am just incredibly honoured to be inducted into the International Tennis Hall of Fame. I look forward to the induction ceremony in Newport in July.”
The American, in addition to being a former World No. 1, is also a US Open champion and a five-time ATP World Tour Masters 1000 titlist. Roddick held the No. 1 Emirates ATP Ranking for 13 weeks, and he was year-end No. 1 in 2003.
He finished the season in the Top 10 of the Emirates ATP Rankings for nine straight years (2002 – 2010). Roddick held rankings inside the Top 5 for 187 weeks during the course of his career.
In 2003, he defeated Juan Carlos Ferrero to win the US Open title, closing out the match on three straight aces. He returned to the final in 2006, and he was also a three-time finalist at Wimbledon. Roddick won 32 singles tour-level titles.
The Nebraska native was a dedicated team member of the United States Davis Cup team for 10 years. In 2007, he was instrumental in leading the U.S. to defeat Russia for their 32nd Davis Cup victory.
Roddick is the founder of the Andy Roddick Foundation, a non-profit that is dedicated to offering enrichment programs for kids outside of the classroom to provide growth opportunities in literacy, STEM, art, and sports. Since retiring from the ATP World Tour, Roddick has stayed active in the sport, competing in WorldTeam Tennis and PowerShares Series events. He has also worked in broadcast for Fox Sports and the BBC.
Joining Roddick in the Hall of Fame Class of 2017 will be Kim Clijsters, a former WTA World No. 1, and Monique Kalkman-van den Bosch, a four-time Paralympic medalist in wheelchair tennis.
Additionally, two individuals will be inducted in the Contributor Category. Steve Flink, a distinguished tennis historian and journalist, has been elected for induction. Vic Braden, a ground-breaking tennis instructor who was among the first to apply sports science to his instructional tactics, will be inducted posthumously.
Australian Open 2017 |
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Venue: Melbourne Park, Melbourne Dates: 16-29 Jan |
Coverage: Daily live commentary on BBC Radio 5 live sports extra; live text on selected matches on the BBC Sport website; TV highlights on BBC Two and online from 21 January. |
Venus Williams reached the Australian Open semi-finals for the first time in 14 years with a straight-set win over Russia’s Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova.
Williams, the 13th seed, saw off 24th seed Pavlyuchenkova 6-4 7-6 (7-3) in the first of the quarter-finals.
The 36-year-old American has never won the title, her best effort a runner-up finish to sister Serena in 2003.
She goes on to face unseeded American Coco Vandeweghe, who thrashed Spain’s seventh seed Garbine Muguruza 6-4 6-0.
Vandeweghe, 25, followed up her win over world number one and defending champion Angelique Kerber with a crushing defeat of French Open champion Muguruza.
“I really wasn’t feeling all that great out there, I was feeling kind of nervous,” said Vandeweghe.
“I just tried to play my best, stay within myself, keep my patterns. I fought through a few break points on her serve, kept on the pressure in the first set and then she finally cracked.
“Once I got rolling in the second it was like a freight train. You couldn’t stop it.”
Williams dropped serve four times against Pavlyuchenkova but was much the stronger in the decisive moments, becoming the oldest woman to reach a Grand Slam semi-final since Martina Navratilova at Wimbledon in 1994.
“I’m so excited, today was such a hard-fought match. She never let up,” said the seven-time Grand Slam champion.
“It’s wonderful to be here at the start of the year, I want to go further. I’m not happy with this.”
On Wednesday, Serena Williams will play Britain’s Johanna Konta at around 02:00 GMT, following the match between Czech fifth seed Karolina Plisokva and Croatia’s Mirjana Lucic-Baroni.
Will Stan The Man take the battle of big hitters against Jo-Wilfried Tsonga? Can Roger wind back the clock once more and play vintage Federer tennis against his old-school foe, Mischa Zverev, who will try to keep points as precise as possible?
Tuesday’s Australian Open quarter-final match-ups should feature two very different but equally as intriguing contests for fans. They’ll also feature a bit of history. For only the second time in the Open Era, all eight Grand Slam quarter-finalists have lost two or more sets before their last-eight match-ups. The last time that happened was almost 45 years ago, at the 1972 US Open.
No. 4 Stan Wawrinka (SUI) v No. 12 Jo-Wilfried Tsonga (FRA)
FedEx ATP Head2Head: Wawrinka leads 4-3
In the first quarter-final on Rod Laver Arena, third seed Stan Wawrinka will try to reach the Australian Open semi-finals for the third time, all of which have come since 2014, when he won the Melbourne title for his first Grand Slam triumph.
Wawrinka has won four of his seven match-ups against Tsonga during their FedEx ATP Head2Head rivalry, including all three of their Grand Slam meetings. But the trio of Grand Slam contests have come on clay in Paris, and the two haven’t met on a hard court in 10 years (Metz, 2007).
“It’s going to be just an interesting match,” Wawrinka said after rattling off some of Tsonga’s second-week experience at the Aussie Open.
The 31-year-old Frenchman reached the semi-finals in 2010. He played in the last four in 2008 en route to his only Australian Open final, when he lost to Novak Djokovic. Tsonga will also be seeking personal revenge against Wawrinka as he’s lost their past three meetings.
“It’s going to be a good challenge,” Tsonga said. “He’s playing really good. It’s going to be important for me… to play my best level. I think I will be ready.”
No. 17 Roger Federer (SUI) v Mischa Zverev (GER)
FedEx ATP Head2Head: Federer leads 2-0
The second quarter-final on Rod Laver Arena will likely feature more precision than power when Roger Federer takes on the veteran Mischa Zverev. Federer has surprised nearly everyone, including himself, with his four-match win streak in Melbourne, a run that’s included two Top 10 wins (Berdych, Nishikori). The Swiss icon is going for his 13th Australian Open semi-final, which would extend his Open-Era record of 12.
The 35 year old has beaten Zverev during both of their FedEx ATP Head2Head meetings, but the two haven’t played since 2013 – Federer won 6-0, 6-0 in Halle – and Zverev is producing the best tennis of his career right now. On Sunday, the left-hander upset top seed Andy Murray, charging the net 118 times and winning more than half of those points. Before that match, Murray had won 30 of his past 31 contests.
“He’s feeling great. Probably feels the best he’s ever felt on a tennis court. That’s how I would feel after the win… against Murray,” Federer said. “It’s going to be tough and different and tricky. That’s my mindset.”
Read More: 10 Things To Know About Zverev
The German shouldn’t feel any pressure during the quarter-final match. Two years ago, he was ranked No. 1,067 in the Emirates ATP Rankings, and, by reaching the quarter-finals in Melbourne, he’s already achieved his best result at a Grand Slam. “Definitely the best match of my life,” he said after beating Murray.
Many fans have latched on to Zverev’s comeback story. But there’s little doubt Federer, who’s going for his 18th Grand Slam title, will still be the crowd favourite.
“I’ve been always super welcomed here,” Federer said. “I think it helps to come back here for almost the 20th year now. They got to know me. I had a chance to speak to them in the post match or in the press. Got to meet a lot of people playing in this country. It clearly has been a benefit.”