Federer falls flat against Nishikori, Anderson off to flyer
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[November 12, 2018]
By Martyn Herman
LONDON (Reuters) - Roger Federer was handed the Sunday night prime
time slot for the opening match of his 16th ATP Finals but fluffed
his lines in an error-strewn 7-6(4) 6-3 defeat by Kei Nishikori.
After Kevin Anderson had beaten Dominic Thiem in the day's
supporting act, the crowds packed into the O2 Arena and settled in
for another Federer masterclass.
What they got instead were 34 unforced errors flying off the Swiss
great's frame as his timing fell apart, and the sight of a tetchy
Federer falling out with the umpire.
Having dug in early on to stay with Federer, Nishikori ended up
running away with the match to inflict a first straight sets defeat
in the ATP Finals round-robin stages on the 20-time Grand Slam
champion.
To sum up Federer's night, he received a warning from umpire Damian
Steiner in the 12th game of the opening set when he bashed a ball
into the crowd.
"He thought I was angry. I wasn't. Now I'm angry because I lost,"
Federer, who will face Thiem on Tuesday in a match he will need to
win to revive his hopes of reaching the semi-finals of the event for
a 15th time.
Thiem was outplayed by South African debutant Anderson in the first
set of the opening match in Lleyton Hewitt group.
The Austrian made a match of it in the second set and was involved
in a gripping tiebreak but went down 6-3 7-6(10).
Federer was far from his best but still looked to have Nishikori
where he wanted him during the early exchanges in a match dubbed the
"Uniqlo derby" after his recent switch to the same Japanese clothing
supplier as his opponent.
It looked bleak for Nishikori when he served at 5-6 and fell behind
0-30 with a woeful volley but he wriggled out of trouble with the
aid of one improvised backhand bunt that caught Federer on his heels
and resulted in the Swiss hitting the ball high into the stands more
in frustration than anger.
While he played down the subsequent warning afterwards, Federer was
not himself in the tiebreak, going down 6-1 with a flurry of errors
before clawing back to 6-4.
A netted forehand offered Nishikori the opener though.
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Japan's Kei Nishikori celebrates winning his group stage match
against Switzerland's Roger Federer Action Images via Reuters/Tony
O'Brien
Nishikori double-faulted to hand Federer the first break of the
match at the start of the second set but Federer gifted back the
advantage in the next game when he again had words with the chair
umpire after taking too long to challenge a call.
Federer lacked his usual panache and dropped serve again to trail
4-2 and Nishikori calmly held at 5-3 for victory -- his first over
Federer since 2014.
"I'm glad to win, it is never easy to play with my idol, it is
always a big challenge against him, so it was great to win today,"
world number nine Nishikori, who will face Anderson next, said on
court.
"I had to change something against him, I lost twice against him in
two months. I played good tennis, using the forehand more and more
aggressive and it came together in the second set."
Wimbledon runner-up Anderson was arguably the day's most impressive
performer as he became the first South African since Wayne Ferreira
in 1995 to qualify for the ATP Finals.
He repelled a fierce Thiem fightback, saving a couple of set points
in the second set tiebreak before clinching a debut win with his
13th ace -- celebrating by inviting the crowd to join in a verse of
"happy birthday" to his watching wife Kelsey.
The Gustavo Kuerten Group, featuring world number one and tournament
favorite Novak Djokovic, Marin Cilic, Alexander Zverev and American
debutant John Isner, begins on Monday.
(Reporting by Martyn Herman; Editing by Ian Chadband and Pritha
Sarkar)
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