Djokovic,
Murray tested in Indian Wells wins
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[March 17, 2015]
By Mark Lamport-Stokes
INDIAN WELLS, California (Reuters) - World
number one Novak Djokovic and fourth-seeded Andy Murray each had to
contend with different degrees of adversity before they advanced to the
fourth round of the BNP Paribas Open on Monday.
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Djokovic, the top seed in the elite ATP Masters 1000 event, was
broken twice in his opening set against Spaniard Albert
Ramos-Vinolas before advancing 7-5 6-3 in an evening match lasting
just under an hour and a half.
"I managed to play the right shot at the right time in the important
moments," said Djokovic, who is bidding for a fourth title at Indian
Wells. "And I managed to sneak through in straight sets."
Scottish world number four Murray recovered from a surprising
second-set lapse during the searing heat of the afternoon at the
Indian Wells Tennis Garden to beat German Phillipp Kohlschreiber 6-1
3-6 6-1.
However, Spanish eighth seed David Ferrer made an early exit, ousted
7-5 6-4 by Australian Bernard Tomic in the third round.
Djokovic won a topsy-turvy opening set that featured five service
breaks. The Serb failed to hold in the first game before breaking
back in the sixth and eighth, but was surprisingly broken again in
the ninth when serving for the set at 5-3.
Though Ramos-Vinolas fought back to level at 5-5, Djokovic held to
love before breaking the Spanish left-hander again in the 12th, the
set ending after 49 minutes when his opponent netted a backhand.
The second set went with serve until a protracted eighth game which
the Serb won when Ramos-Vinolas blasted a low forehand wide, then
served out to love in the ninth to seal victory.
BIG-SERVING OPPONENT
Djokovic will next face big-serving American John Isner, who powered
past South African Kevin Anderson 7-6(6) 6-2.
"He's one of the best servers in the history of the game," said the
Serb. "I expect a very tough match."
Murray appeared in total control after breezing through the opening
set in just 25 minutes, but was broken after a marathon eighth game
in the second as Kohlschreiber leveled the contest.
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It was then back to business in the third for Murray as he broke the
German's serve in the second and fourth games before sealing victory
in a little under two hours when his opponent hit a forehand wide.
"Towards the end of the second set there were a lot of long games
and he was creating a lot of opportunities," Murray said.
"The game where I got broken, I played a few poor shots as well. He
capitalized on that. But apart from that, I thought I played a good
match against a tough opponent who plays well in these conditions."
In other matches, fifth-seeded Japanese Kei Nishikori fought back to
beat Spanish left-hander Fernando Verdasco 6-7(6) 6-1 6-4 while
Australian Thanasi Kokkinakis scraped past Juan Monaco of Argentina
6-2 5-7 7-6(5).
(Editing by Steve Keating/Peter Rutherford)
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