Federer fends off British 'mirror' Evans to advance
Send a link to a friend
[January 16, 2019]
By Ian Ransom
MELBOURNE (Reuters) - Double defending
champion Roger Federer weathered a stern test from the impressive
Dan Evans and paid the British battler the ultimate compliment after
prevailing 7-6(5) 7-6(3) 6-3 to reach the third round of the
Australian Open on Wednesday.
Having thrashed Denis Istomin in his Melbourne Park opener, third
seed Federer faced a different beast in world number 189 Evans, who
made a mockery of his ranking and pushed the Swiss hard throughout a
high-quality duel at Rod Laver Arena.
"It feels like playing a mirror a little bit and that was my mindset
going in," 20-times Grand Slam champion Federer said of qualifier
Evans, who is rebuilding his career after serving a year-long drug
ban.
"He has a lot of slice and more serve and volley, my size can help
me a bit more."
Showcasing a sturdy defense and counter-punching gamely, Evans broke
Federer for the first time in the tournament, dragging the former
world number one into a second tiebreak to cheer British fans after
Andy Murray's first round elimination.
But the Birmingham man lacked the edge in the clutch points while
Federer was clinical.
He broke Evans in the fourth game of the third set and served out
the match to love, sealing the win with an imperious backhand winner
down the line.
"He was feeling it today, I thought," said Federer, who will play
Taylor Fritz for a place in the fourth round.
"He was very sort of cat and mouse a bit. Very interesting. I liked
the match. I thought he was playing well. It was enjoyable."
Evans sparkled in a run to the fourth round at the 2017 tournament
but missed last year's action at Melbourne Park, after testing
positive for cocaine at the Barcelona Open.
He entered Rod Laver Arena for his Federer match-up to a soundtrack
of Blur's Britpop anthem "Parklife".
[to top of second column] |
Switzerland's Roger Federer celebrates after winning the match
against Britain's Dan Evans. REUTERS/Edgar Su
There was nothing hazy about his game, however, as he attacked the
lines with abandon and rushed the net with conviction.
He saved a set point at 6-5 with a punchy backhand volley down the
line and had Federer on the ropes in the tiebreak.
But instead of volleying into an open court to prise a set point off
the Swiss, he pushed the forehand well wide.
Reprieved, Federer took full advantage and closed out the set when a
scrambling Evans missed a desperate backhand passing short.
The Briton was clearly gutted by the lost chance and promptly threw
away his next service game in the second set while still in a funk.
Yet he regathered his wits quickly.
He battled to save two set points at 5-3 down and then broke back to
5-5, outpointing Federer with an elegant one-handed backhand passing
shot that the former world number one would have been proud to call
his own.
Once again, Federer lifted in the tiebreak, bringing up three set
points in a trice and converting the first with an ace.
From there it was a formality for one of the game's most ruthless
front-runners as Federer cruised to victory to keep his bid for a
hat-trick of Melbourne titles alive.
(Editing by Amlan Chakraborty)
[© 2019 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2019 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|