Ruthless Federer sends Chung packing, faces Coric next
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[March 16, 2018]
(Reuters) - South Korean Chung
Hyeon managed to hang around against Roger Federer a little longer
this time around, but only just, as the Swiss maestro advanced to
the semi-finals of the BNP Paribas Open 7-5 6-1 on Thursday.
Chung's fairytale run at the Australian Open in January came to a
crashing halt when he retired with foot blisters while trailing
Federer 6-1 5-2 in their semi-final.
Federer, who won his 20th grand slam title with his victory at
Melbourne Park, was ruthless with his 21-year-old opponent once
again on Thursday and took his unbeaten run this year to 16 matches,
equaling his record from 12 years ago.
Chung said he had enjoyed going toe-to-toe with Federer in a tight
first set.
“I was down one break, and I'm just trying to stay calm and I'm just
trying to learn from Roger," the Korean told the ATP's official
website. "And I come back, five-all, and he played good. I'm really
happy to play against Roger."
Federer will next meet Borna Coric, who defeated world number nine
Kevin Anderson 2-6 6-4 7-6(3).
The 21-year-old Croatian had initially looked out-gunned by the
big-serving South African, who had won all three of their previous
meetings without dropping a set.
After weathering an onslaught of huge serves in the first set,
however, Coric was able to force longer rallies in the second and
third, where his speed and accuracy allowed him to control points.
“I didn't start very well. He was hitting the ball very big, and I
just couldn't find my rhythm on the ball,” Coric said.
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Roger Federer (SUI) in his quarterfinal match against Hyeon Chung
(not pictured) in the BNP Paribas Open at the Indian Wells Tennis
Garden. Mandatory Credit: Jayne Kamin-Oncea-USA TODAY Sports
“I started going more for the serve. And then I broke him earlier in
the second set, which was really helpful.
"In the third, again, I knew it's one break, it's two or three
points that are going to decide, and that's what happened.”
The match appeared all but over in the third when a frustrated Coric
double faulted to hand Anderson a break for a 4-2 lead but the world
number 49 broke straight back and went on to force a tie-breaker.
Anderson was ragged thereafter and Coric pumped his fist in triumph
after the seventh seed sent a forehand long to hand the Croatian the
biggest win of his career.
(Reporting by Rory Carroll and Shrivathsa Sridhar; Editing by Nick
Mulvenney/Peter Rutherford)
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