Cilic
aiming to turn up heat on Federer
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[January 27, 2018]
By Martyn Herman
MELBOURNE (Reuters) - Even by Roger
Federer's standards his path to a 30th grand slam final has been a
breeze but things are about to hot up as Croatian Marin Cilic
prepares to try to stop the Swiss claiming a sixth Australian Open
title on Sunday.
Federer has only been extended past the two-hour mark twice in
reaching his seventh final in Melbourne and even those two matches
this week against unseeded Marton Fucsovics and Tomas Berdych were
relatively straightforward straight-sets wins.
"I can't believe how fast now the week has turned out to be," the
36-year-old said after his semi-final opponent Chung Hyeon retired
after 62 minutes of an old-fashioned schooling with foot blisters.
One local bookmaker says it has already paid out A$500,000 to
punters who backed world number two Federer to retain the title he
won in a thriller against Rafael Nadal last year.
Hopes of a repeat of that epic were dashed when Nadal retired hurt
in the fifth set of his quarter-final with Cilic on Tuesday,
although nothing should be taken away from the Croatian sixth seed,
who crunched a mind-boggling 83 winners.
A top-10 regular, Cilic will bring an arsenal of heavy artillery to
Rod Laver Arena on Sunday when temperatures in Melbourne are
expected to be in the high 30s Celsius with high humidity -- the
most extreme conditions Federer has faced during two weeks in which
he played only one day match.
Cilic has a 1-8 head-to-head record against Federer but his sole
victory came in the U.S. Open semi-final in 2014 when the
six-foot-six powerhouse went on to claim his maiden grand slam title
against Japan's Kei Nishikori.
He also led by two sets at Wimbledon two years ago and had match
points, although 12 months later in the final he suffered a painful
straight sets Centre Court loss to Federer when blisters reduced him
to tears.
To have the chance to banish that memory so soon in another grand
slam final will make Cilic dangerous on Sunday.
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Roger Federer of Switzerland hits a shot during a practice session.
REUTERS/Toru Hanai
"I definitely think him winning the U.S. Open, it gave him great
belief," Federer said. "I like his attitude. He's very professional.
On the court, he's a winner.
"He's there to win and not just to be there. Sometimes you see other
players you feel like they're happy to have made the quarters. I
think he strives for more."
Cilic, whose powerful serve and tree-chopping forehand will be the
key to his chances, says Sunday's showdown is not a chance of
revenge for what happened at Wimbledon.
"I think I played great tournament so far with my level of tennis,"
the 29-year-old, bidding to become the first Croatian with multiple
grand slam titles, said.
"I think everything is in good, solid spot. I'm really excited about
the final."
He will start as the underdog though as the apparently ageless
Federer chases yet more records.
Should Federer win he would join Novak Djokovic and Roy Emerson with
the most Australian Open titles and would equal Rod Laver's record
of claiming four grand slams after turning 30.
Asked what it would mean to claim a record-extending 20th grand slam
title, Federer said: "Twenty times special. It would be amazing. I'm
happy I'm still around, still healthy, still playing good, giving
myself chances, playing the best."
(Editing by Peter Rutherford)
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