Eighth seed Berdych defeated Argentine Juan Monaco 6-3 6-4 in their
quarter-final to set up a re-match of their tense and at times
acrimonious Australian Open semi-final which Murray won in four
sets.
Murray's 501st career win was far from easy as the 21-year-old
Thiem, ranked 52nd in the world, used an impressive backhand and
some entertaining tennis to take the first set.
But after Murray, far from his best, forced a deciding set, he took
firm control after earning a break at the end of a long fourth game
to go up 3-1.
"At the beginning of the match I didn't return well, especially
returning his first serve. That put me in sort of a defensive
position a lot when he was serving. I ended up doing quite a lot of
running there," said Murray.
"In the second set I went up and I was creating quite a lot of
opportunities, which was good, but I was just not quite finding the
right shot.
"I think in the third set the difference was really my returning. I
returned his first serve extremely well. I put him on the back
foot," he said.
Thiem was philosophical about his loss.
"He won because he was the better player. It's very simple. I played
a very good first set of course but if I could keep at that level of
the first set I wouldn't be ranked 52nd I would be much higher.
"I played a little bit on my limit. Of course I am trying to work to
make that my standard level."
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Monaco, backed by a large Argentine support, put up a strong fight
in the second set until Berdych broke for a 5-4 lead.
"It was a very tough one, he played very fast and pushed me every
ball. I am really happy I found a way through," said the Czech.
Thursday's other quarter-finals will see top seed Novak Djokovic up
against Spain's David Ferrer and Japan's fourth-seeded Kei Nishikori
against American John Isner.
(Editing by Frank Pingue/Greg Stutchbury)
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