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09/08/10 10:55:00
Printable Page
09/08 22:48 CDT Federer tops Soderling, reaches US Open semifinals
Federer tops Soderling, reaches US Open semifinals
By HOWARD FENDRICH
AP Tennis Writer
NEW YORK (AP) -- For one match at least, Roger Federer was back to his old self.
Back to beating Robin Soderling, and back to being a Grand Slam semifinalist -
two things he used to do with such regularity.
Treating the whipping wind and his familiar foe as only slight nuisances,
16-time Grand Slam champion Federer served his way to a convincing 6-4, 6-4,
7-5 victory over the fifth-seeded Soderling in the U.S. Open quarterfinals
Wednesday night.
Federer had an 18-2 edge in aces against the big-hitting Soderling, mixing
speed with pinpoint placement that kept the Swede guessing.
"I've been practicing my serve a whole lot, for my whole career. If I can't
serve in the wind, I've got a problem, you know?" Federer said. "You could
probably wake me up at 2 in the morning, or 4 in the morning, and I could hit a
few serves."
The victory improved his career mark against Soderling to 13-1. The lone loss
was in their previous match, in this year's French Open quarterfinals.
Soderling's victory there ended Federer's streak of reaching the semifinals at
a record 23 consecutive major tournaments.
Federer then lost in the quarterfinals at Wimbledon, too, prompting some to
question whether his best days were behind him. But now, a month after his 29th
birthday, he is back in the semifinals at a Grand Slam tournament - one that he
has won five times.
Federer has won 45 of his last 46 matches in Flushing Meadows, the one
exception the 2009 final against Juan Martin del Potro.
Now Federer will meet third-seeded Novak Djokovic in the semifinals for the
third U.S. Open in a row. It's also the fourth consecutive year they'll play
each other in New York, dating to the 2007 final, and Federer is 4-0 in those
matches.
"You never know what's going to happen," 2008 Australian Open champion Djokovic
said after beating 17th-seeded Gael Monfils of France 7-6 (2), 6-1, 6-2 earlier
Wednesday. "I don't want to think about those losses in the last three years,
which were really, really close."
All of the day's matches were filled with wind that gusted at up to 30 mph,
sending all sorts of debris - brown napkins; plastic bags; players' towels -
rolling on the court like tumbleweed, forcing points to be stopped and
repeatedly making players catch their ball tosses.
About a half-dozen lets were called during top-seeded Caroline Wozniacki's 6-2,
7-5 victory over 45th-ranked Dominika Cibulkova in the last women's
quarterfinal.
"This felt like playing in a hurricane or something," said Wozniacki, who is
19-1 since Wimbledon and has won her past 13 matches.
In Friday's semifinals, the 2009 U.S. Open runner-up will face 2010 Wimbledon
runner-up Vera Zvonareva.
Zvonareva was perfectly steady - in her mind and with her strokes - and beat
31st-seeded Kaia Kanepi of Estonia 6-3, 7-5 in Wednesday's first singles match.
A year ago in New York, during a fourth-round loss, Zvonareva wasted six match
points and threw a tantrum right there on court. She bawled. She slammed her
racket against her leg. She begged the chair umpire to get her a pair of
scissors so she could cut tape off her knees.
And Wednesday? No. 7 Zvonareva was calm and composed, letting Kanepi make
mistake after mistake, 60 unforced errors in all. Zvonareva finished with only
28.
"Yeah, it was blowing in every way," Kanepi said after falling to 0-3 in major
quarterfinals.
All of her stray shots allowed Zvonareva to take 84 points despite hitting only
10 winners. The first game of the match set the tone: Zvonareva needed five
points to break Kanepi, and all five came courtesy of unforced errors.
"Well, I don't think she was just making errors for no reasons. I was making it
difficult for her," said Zvonareva, who turned 26 on Tuesday. "She had to go
more for her shots. I was trying to guess where she was playing and reading her
game."
Neither afternoon match featured much drama - nor doubt about who would win. In
sum, they felt akin to opening acts before Wednesday's featured performers took
the stage under the lights.
First came Wozniacki-Cibulkova, with Donald Trump in attendance, his hair
getting whipped by the wind.
"He called my agent and asked if there was going to be a space in my box," said
Wozniacki, who made only 18 unforced errors, 25 fewer than Cibulkova. "I said,
'Of course, there's always a place for Mr. Trump.'"
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