SPORTS

Roddick survives, Federer thrives

By Bill Barclay
June 30, 2005

Roger Federer and Lleyton Hewitt gave no quarter to dangerous opponents at Wimbledon on Wednesday but Andy Roddick was made to fight hard for his semi-final place.

Frenchman Sebastien Grosjean, who reached the last four in each of the last two years, gave US second seed Roddick a real fright in their quarter-final on Centre Court before the second seed came through 3-6, 6-2, 6-1, 3-6, 6-3.

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Swiss top seed Federer, who will face Hewitt in the semi-finals, deployed majestic counter-attacking skills to smother the monstrous forehand of Chilean Fernando Gonzalez in a 7-5, 6-2, 7-6 win on Court One.

Australian third seed Hewitt had marginally more trouble dispatching Spanish all-courter Feliciano Lopez 7-5, 6-4, 7-6 in his quarter-final on Centre Court.

Roddick, in the semi-finals for the third successive year, faces Sweden's Thomas Johansson in the last four.

The 2002 Australian Open champion and 12th seed beat David Nalbandian of Argentina 7-6, 6-2, 6-2 to become the first Swede since Stefan Edberg in 1993 to reach the Wimbledon semi-finals.

Roddick was outplayed in the spin and slice department by Grosjean, whom he had beaten in their last six encounters, in the first set of their Centre Court duel.

It was the first set the talented Marseillais had won in four matches against 22-year-old Roddick on grass.

Roddick, runner-up to Federer last year, clicked his 140mph serves into gear in the second and third sets but Grosjean's sporadic brilliance continued to trouble him and the Frenchman dominated the fourth set.

The psychological edge Roddick holds over him told in the decider, however. He immediately broke 3-0 clear and nervelessly wrapped up his second five-set victory of the tournament.

Despite the see-saw nature of the match Roddick said: "I stayed on a pretty even keel throughout the match.

"It was a big one for me to get through. I feel like I really needed a result like this and I'd love to take it a step or two further."

Federer, pursuing a hat-trick of Wimbledon titles, broke early on Court One to lead 4-1 before Gonzalez, the first Chilean quarter-finalist for 20 years, hit back to level the set at 4-4.

Federer simply upped his game. A lunging forehand retrieve secured him a set point at 6-5 and he needed no second invitation.

His superiority established, the defending champion made off with the second set in less than half an hour.

INDUSTRIOUS HEWITT

He allowed Gonzalez to take him to 6-6 in the third before capping an exemplary tiebreak with a match-winning ace for his 34th consecutive victory on grass, now only seven short of Bjorn Borg's record.

"It's always interesting to play against him because you sort of have to always weather the storm against him," said Federer. "He hits the ball with so much pace.

"I played a great match, today. I can beat any player with this level of play."

Twice a Grand Slam winner, Hewitt reached only his second Wimbledon semi-final with a typically industrious victory.

Lopez is a rare Spaniard who can serve-volley. The 23-year-old was playing his first Grand Slam quarter-final, however, and Hewitt is probably the best service returner in men's tennis.

The Australian refused to panic despite suffering an early service break and he broke when it really counted at the end of each of the first two sets on Centre Court.

Like Federer, he won the tiebreak 7-2 to end the Spaniard's hopes of becoming his country's first Wimbledon semi-finalist since Manuel Orantes in 1972.

"My whole game came together well," said Hewitt. "I needed it to. He's a dangerous opponent, especially on this surface with a big lefty serve.

"I started seeing the ball like a football at the end of each set."

Johansson's all-court craft allowed him to out-manoeuvre 2002 runner-up Nalbandian and reach his first Wimbledon semi-final.

"It feels unreal," said the Swede, comfortably the oldest man left in the semi-finals at 30. "Everything is just great. It's a lot of fun. The surface is pretty slow so it suits my game very well."

 

Bill Barclay
Source: REUTERS
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