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"He got nervous. That was the main difference," Murray said. "I did start playing better toward the end of the second set. And because I was in it, I started to feel that momentum was with me."
Later, Berdych won 7-1 in the first-set tiebreaker, and kept a firm grip on the match, save his hiccup in the third set.
"Probably there was not, well, not a bad spot," said Berdych, who has never won a Grand Slam tournament. "Of course, I lost the third set. But, you know, I cannot count on beating Roger in straight sets and not getting in any trouble."
Maybe the biggest trouble came in the fifth game of the fourth set when he took an awkward tumble to the court and fell on his right hand, the one he holds the racket with. But on a night when everything went well, there was nothing more than a scrape -- nothing to prevent him from finishing up a win in which he played well and Federer couldn't harness his forehand, committing 24 unforced errors from that side.
He hadn't played since Saturday, thanks to a walkover he received when Mardy Fish withdrew with health problems. But this year's Wimbledon champion and silver medalist at the Olympics was not in the mood for excuses.
"Once, I had six and a half days off and I ended up winning Wimbledon," Federer said. "I don't think this was the issue tonight."
Meanwhile, Roddick simply found himself up against a better player. He had beaten men ranked 43rd and 59th since announcing his retirement, but del Potro, the 2009 champion, offered a completely different kind of challenge.
At 6-foot-6 with a flat forehand that he was angling off at will, the 2009 champion here turned things around in the second set. Gaining more traction on Roddick's once-all-powerful serve, that still maxed out at 135 mph Wednesday, del Potro whipped a cross-court forehand return right at Roddick's feet on set point.
Del Potro's momentum continued when he broke to begin the third set, and in the fourth, he broke early, then served out the match.
"No one really wants to be on the opposite side, to be the one who retires someone," del Potro said. "Andy is that kind of player everyone wants to keep playing forever."
But nothing lasts forever, and Roddick was very much in touch with that coming into this tournament.
He recalled his first trip to Flushing Meadows, back when he was 9. That was 1991. Jimmy Connors was making his memorable run to the semifinals at age 39.
Fifteen years later, Connors would coach Roddick for about two years, before they parted ways. Still, the five-time U.S. Open champion, who turned 60 over the weekend, was on hand Wednesday to watch Roddick fashion his own ending.
"He's a big boy. He's 30 years old and he's a U.S. Open champion," Connors said. "I'm sure his after-effect, when he gets away from the U.S. Open, will be a bit different. ... It's a life-changing experience."
[Associated
Press;
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