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"For me, it was great experience," Andreev said, "and hopefully, like, in the future is going to help me."
He fell to 1-7 in five-set matches, and big-match toughness certainly was a factor at key stages.
That also could be the case when Federer plays 130th-ranked Gilles Muller in the quarterfinals Thursday. The only man from Luxembourg to play Grand Slam tennis knocked off No. 5 Nikolay Davydenko 6-4, 4-6, 6-3, 7-6 (10) to become only the second qualifier to reach the U.S. Open quarterfinals.
Muller noted that he's used to observing a major tournament's "second week, and especially quarterfinals, from home, I mean, on my sofa, watching on TV. Now I'm here, and I'm in it."
Asked about facing another player who doesn't carry any burden of expectations into a match against him, Federer shrugged and said: "It's been like this for 4 1/2 years. This is nothing different for me. It's just a guy who's got even less to lose."
Scurrying along the baseline to whip his go-for-it forehand and find a line, Andreev managed to make the once-invincible Federer seem human -- not just during points, but between them.
Normally so calm, so collected, Federer often threw his head back in disappointment or screamed with delight. He pulled a ball out his pocket and chucked it. He cracked another ball into the net after one lost opportunity.
But in the second set, Andreev accumulated seven break points -- and Federer saved them all. Any one of those could have swung the match for good. And in the crucible of the fifth set, Andreev compiled four more break points, all with Federer serving at 4-2 -- and, again, Federer handled the situation better, erasing every one.
"Very important moment," Andreev acknowledged.
Another came in the second game of the fifth set, when Andreev managed to set aside two break points for Federer. On the third, though, Federer made a great return of a 119 mph serve, and Andreev eventually tried a drop shot.
Chugging forward, Federer not only got to the spinning ball, but somehow flicked a lob that curled like an upside-down "U" over the 6-foot-tall Andreev and landed right at the baseline. Andreev ran back and put his racket on the ball, but flung a backhand out. Federer pumped his fists, while Andreev smacked a ball into the stands, drawing a warning from the chair umpire.
"The moment of the night," Federer called it.
His serve was broken in the match's opening game, and then he blew a lead in the first tiebreaker. That set closed with a 13-stroke exchange that Federer ended by missing a forehand wide -- already his 19th unforced error of the match, nearly twice as many as Andreev, so far.
There was more of the same, but in the end, Federer could rely on muscle memory from big matches in big settings that Andreev could not.
"Maybe for a while it was quite always the same for me -- go on court, you win all the time," Federer said. "So maybe you don't take it for granted that much anymore."
[Associated Press
Copyright 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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