05 September 2014

TENNIS: Roger Federer Beats Gael Monfils In Epic US Open Comeback

Roger Federer battled back from two sets down and double match point to defeat 20th seed Gael Monfils 4-6, 3-6, 6-4, 7-5, 6-2 to reach the semi-finals of the US Open. Federer, aiming to add to his grand slam men’s record total of 17 singles crowns, survived a pair of match points when down 15-40 on serve in the 10th game of the fourth set.

Frenchman Monfils struck a backhand long to squander his first chance to claim victory and then Federer denied the 20th seed with a sizzling forehand winner to stay in the match. From that point on, Federer took charge by holding serve for 5-5, closing out the fourth set and then breaking Monfils in the first game of the fifth. Playing at his brilliant best after scattering unforced errors earlier in the match, the Swiss master took nine of the last 11 games in the three-hour 20-minute clash at Arthur Ashe Stadium.


Federer said he kept a positive attitude despite falling behind. “I still thought the finish line was far for Gael,” Federer told the stadium crowd. “I knew I could play better tennis. When I was down two match points, I wasn’t feeling so great ... I thought ‘this is it, this is the last point, man. Just go down fighting, don’t miss an easy shot and let him have it.’

“I served well and stayed in the match and somehow turned it around. I felt great in the fifth, though. I started playing better and better as the match went on. It’s a great feeling.”

It marked the ninth time in his career that Federer escaped from a two-set deficit, the last time in the third round of Wimbledon in 2012 against another Frenchman in Julien Benneteau.

Marin Cilic

Federer will next play resurgent 14th seed Marin Cilic, who blasted his way past sixth seed Tomas Berdych 6-2, 6-4, 7-6 (7-4) to become the first Croatian to reach the US Open semi-finals since his coach Goran Ivanisevic in 1996.

For Cilic, who missed last year’s US Open while serving a doping ban that cost him four months on the tour, the win ended an arduous wait to return to the last four of a grand slam for the first time since the 2010 Australian Open.

“I mean, it was a difficult period. I didn’t know when I’m going to start back,” said the 25-year-old Cilic. “But it was also a good period for me. I matured a bit more and I was working day after day. Of course it was a huge motivation for me when I came back. I felt that I was more happy. I was enjoying much more the tennis court and still working hard for it. I felt tougher with myself in preparations and during the matches just clearer with my goals.”

Certainly since his return last October the 14th seed has been firing on all cylinders, winning events in Zagreb and Delray Beach while reaching the final in the Rotterdam. His 45 match wins this season are second only to Federer (53) and his run to the Flushing Meadows semis has been workmanlike and included wins over 26th seed Gilles Simon and 18th seed Kevin Anderson.

“Even though I had great success beginning of the year, I felt that I started to play really well somewhere from French Open,” said Cilic. “Since then I think the things are in good place for me and moving really, really good with everything.”

Despite all the positives Cilic claims to have gained from his brief exile from the sport he remains unhappy that he was found guilty of taking a tainted supplement given to him by his mother. “It angered me how all the process went because it was not fair to me,” said Cilic, who maintains he never knowingly took any performance-enhancing drugs. “It wouldn’t be fair to any tennis player.

“So that was just very bad memories. But, you know, when you’re against big organisations you are small ants. You can’t do much. So I just accepted it. When I came back to the tennis court I erased it from my memory. I just used the positive parts.”

Certainly there were plenty of positives to be found in Cilic’s quarter-final performance. Cilic, who pounded out 19 aces, had his Czech opponent under pressure right from the start breaking Berdych at the first opportunity in the first two sets to grab a 2-0 lead.

Berdych turned the tables on the 14th-seeded Croatian in the third and raced out to a 3-0 lead but Cilic, relying on his booming serve, broke back and forced a tiebreak before clinching the match with a thundering ace and forehand winner on the final two points.

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