The world number two, who has a chance of leapfrogging Novak
Djokovic at the top of the rankings and equaling Pete Sampras's
record of ending six seasons as the number one, knew Chardy would be
a tough nut to crack and he did not disappoint at Bercy.
"I was expecting it to be difficult... Chardy has made it hard for
me in the past," Federer told a news conference.
"I thought it could be tough, and it was. I could have lost the
first, I could have won the second, but it went the other way. So I
think as the match went longer, the better I actually started to
play and created more opportunities."
Chardy, who beat Federer in their previous encounter at the Rome
Masters earlier this year, saved two match points in the second set.
The second-seeded Swiss, however, claimed the deciding set in more
comfortable fashion to set up a third-round meeting with France's
Lucas Pouille or Italian Fabio Fognini.
It went much more smoothly for eighth seed Andy Murray who is within
one match of securing his place in the ATP World Tour Finals next
month after easing past local favorite Julien Benneteau 6-3 6-4.
The Scot, who needs to reach the last eight here to book his ticket
to the Nov. 9-16 Finals in London, next meets ninth seed Grigor
Dimitrov.
Bulgarian Dimitrov, who also has a chance to qualify for the
season-ending tournament, destroyed Uruguay's Pablo Cuevas 6-0 6-3.
"He gave me a good start," Murray told reporters. "He served three
double faults in a row in his first service game.
"I served very well in the first set. There were no really long or
physical rallies at all in the first set."
After dropping outside the top 10 following his U.S. Open
quarter-final exit, Murray began a late push for a spot in the
London showpiece event which features eight of the best players this
season.
Murray, in his sixth consecutive week on the tour, has won titles in
Valencia, Vienna and Shenzhen and he appeared in great form again on
Wednesday when he was rarely threatened by Benneteau.
Earlier, third-seeded Swiss Stan Wawrinka won for the first time in
more than a month as he beat Austrian wunderkind Dominic Thiem 6-4
7-6(6).
Wawrinka, who has already qualified for the Tour Finals, lacked
consistency but prevailed on the important points, relying on his
superb backhand.
The Swiss lost his first match at the previous three tournaments he
entered.
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"I know my level of game is here. What I still miss is winning
matches," said Wawrinka.
"I started this tournament off pretty well, which I usually don't
do, because usually I need time to adapt. But today I played well
from the start."
Seventh seed Milos Raonic of Canada kept his London challenge alive
with a 6-3 5-7 7-6(4) win over American qualifier Jack Sock, as did
fourth-seeded Spaniard David Ferrer who beat in-form Belgian David
Goffin 6-3 2-6 6-3.
Japan's Kei Nishikori, who needs to reach the last four to qualify
for London unless other results fall his way, also stayed in the
hunt with a 6-7(4) 6-2 6-3 win over Spain's Tommy Robredo.
THE RACE TO LONDON
(as of Oct. 29 before start of play)POINTS
1 Novak Djokovic 9100 - qualified
2 Roger Federer 8520 - qualified
3 Rafa Nadal* 6835 - withdrew
4 Stan Wawrinka 4805 - qualified
5 Andy Murray 4295
6 Kei Nishikori 4265
7Tomas Berdych 41958 Marin Cilic** 4150 - qualified
9 David Ferrer 3865
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
10 Milos Raonic 3840
11 Grigor Dimitrov 3555
* Nadal has withdrawn due to appendicitis
** Cilic qualifies as U.S. Open champion
(Editing by Toby Davis and Pritha Sarkar)
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