Clinical Medvedev beats childhood friend to reach U.S. Open semis
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[September 10, 2020]
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Daniil
Medvedev continued his march towards a first Grand Slam title on
Wednesday, powering into the U.S. Open semi-finals with a clinical
7-6(6) 6-3 7-6(5) victory over childhood friend Andrey Rublev.
The first Russian duo in the quarter-finals at a Grand Slam since
Igor Andreev and Nikolay Davydenko at Roland Garros in 2007,
Medvedev showed no fear during a ruthless display that sent him
through to the last four without losing a set.
No player in the Open Era has won the U.S. Open men’s title without
dropping a set.
With Roger Federer and Rafa Nadal missing, and top seed Novak
Djokovic having been disqualified for hitting a line judge with a
ball, Medvedev showed why he is now the bookmakers' favourite to win
in New York.
The third seed never gave Rublev a break chance in the entire match
while hammering down 16 aces.
"I felt like I could get in trouble so I was very happy with the
win," said Medvedev, who called for the trainer to work on his
shoulder during the match. "One point decided two sets so it was a
tough match."
Medvedev, who lost an epic five-setter to Nadal in last year's
final, awaits the winner between second-seeded Austrian Dominic
Thiem and Australian Alex de Minaur.
Having competed against each other since they were young kids the
practice partners knew exactly what to expect and a grinding
63-minute opening set offered no surprises or breaks.
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Daniil Medvedev of Russia celebrates after match point against
Andrey Rublev of Russia (not pictured) in a men's singles
quarter-finals match on day nine of the 2020 U.S. Open tennis
tournament at USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center.
Mandatory Credit: Robert Deutsch-USA TODAY Sports
Rublev, who had never taken a set off Medvedev in three career
meetings, looked poised to end that run when he went 6-3 up in the
tiebreak but the 10th seed was unable to close the deal as Medvedev
swept five straight points.
"There is more chance you lose a set down 5-1 than win it," said
Medvedev. "Usually he is very aggressive but today he was trying to
put the ball in the court more so I tried to be more aggressive and
really go for it even in the third set tiebreaker and it worked out
for me."
The collapse sent the volatile Rublev into a rage, smashing his
racket, throwing towels and yelling at his coach and the 22-year-old
never recovered.
Medvedev maintained pressure in the second, registering the only
break of the match to nose in front 4-2 on way to a commanding 2-0
advantage.
Rublev continued to battle but Medvedev gave him no openings and
closed out the match 7-5 in a tiebreak.
(Reporting by Steve Keating in Toronto, Editing by Toby Davis and Ed
Osmond)
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