Szlia
Member
No Rain! We have our semi finals!
DJOKOVIC[1] sprinted to win the first set 6-1, but then things got complicated. Cilic served well, played well, proved more reliable than Djokovic on the backhand side and the serb had a lot of trouble with his footing. The cost: 6-3 7-6 for a pumped up croatian. Djokovic changed shoes early in the fourth and also a rumor came from center court, soon confirmed by the info board during the following change of ends. After that, the agitated Djokovic became serene and bagged the fourth and fifth sets 6-2 6-2.
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DIMITROV[11] also sprinted to win the first set 6-1 against a very flat Murray. Everytime it seemed the scott was finally getting his teeth into the match, playing a brilliant shot or a great rally, he followed it by a couple inexplicable unforced errors. He still managed to recover from a break down in the second set (helped by a very poor Dimitrov service game), but he lost it in the tie breaker. Dimitrov kept his focus, continued to fight on every point and did not drop from his high standard of play, allowing him to get rid of the defending champion with a final 6-2. In the post match interview the bulgarian said that during the warm up he felt that Murray was not at his best and it gace him hope and confidence!
Djokovic is very much aware of the thread that Dimitrov represents, having lost to him last year on clay. On top of that, Dimitrov is a much fitter and stronger player now than he was last year, thanks to the good hard work done with Roger Rasheed and he is a tougher proposition on grass than on clay. Should be a good one!
FEDERER[4] did not have the best of starts against Wawrinka as the better ranked underdog broke early and managed to defend his own deal despite a very low first serve percentage. The servers reigned supreme in the second set, but Federer managed to prevail in a tense and possibly vital breaker. This did not sit so well with Wawrinka in more ways than one as he had to call for the doctor. No doubt that leveling the match and seeing his opponent of the day possibly struggle physically boosted Federer's confidence. He continued with his serving clinic, and broke Wawrinka in both following sets. Closing the match was a bit of a struggle, Wawrinka even getting a break point to level the fourth at 5 all, but a confident one-two punch followed by a winning volley snuffed that hope and soon after Federer reached his 9th Wimbeldon semi-final.
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RAONIC[8] was not interested in getting surprised by Kyrgios. After losing the first set in a breaker he found a way to avoid this scenario in the second and third sets. Visibly tired, the young australian was no longer able to make any impression in his return games (not like he was able to do much of one in the first place), but the crowd helped him defend his service games and force a breaker. This time though it was all Raonic who raced to a 6-1 lead. Kyrgios took care of his own two serves, managed to steal one of the minibreak back, but, fittingly, Raonic ended the charade with one of his many aces down the T.
I would like to think that Federer has enough tools in his arsenal to defend his serve consistently and get into two or three Raonic service games per set. That being said, if Raonic serves well and there is no break in sight, it puts you under tremendous pressure and a couple untimely errors on grass, be it in a tie-break or a service game, can cost a set. Should be a nerve-wracking one.
Fun WB fact of the day: In 1904 Frank Riesley and Sydney Smith faced each other in the semi-final, but, when the match reached two sets all, they chose the winner with a coin toss! Riesley and Smith were playing in double together and wanted to save some energy for the final they had to play! This kinda paid off as they won the double's final and Riesley also crushed his opponent in the single's final. In that era though the tournament was only a mean to determine the challenger that could then defy the title holder and our crafty coin tossers lost both the challenge matches!
DJOKOVIC[1] sprinted to win the first set 6-1, but then things got complicated. Cilic served well, played well, proved more reliable than Djokovic on the backhand side and the serb had a lot of trouble with his footing. The cost: 6-3 7-6 for a pumped up croatian. Djokovic changed shoes early in the fourth and also a rumor came from center court, soon confirmed by the info board during the following change of ends. After that, the agitated Djokovic became serene and bagged the fourth and fifth sets 6-2 6-2.
vs
DIMITROV[11] also sprinted to win the first set 6-1 against a very flat Murray. Everytime it seemed the scott was finally getting his teeth into the match, playing a brilliant shot or a great rally, he followed it by a couple inexplicable unforced errors. He still managed to recover from a break down in the second set (helped by a very poor Dimitrov service game), but he lost it in the tie breaker. Dimitrov kept his focus, continued to fight on every point and did not drop from his high standard of play, allowing him to get rid of the defending champion with a final 6-2. In the post match interview the bulgarian said that during the warm up he felt that Murray was not at his best and it gace him hope and confidence!
Djokovic is very much aware of the thread that Dimitrov represents, having lost to him last year on clay. On top of that, Dimitrov is a much fitter and stronger player now than he was last year, thanks to the good hard work done with Roger Rasheed and he is a tougher proposition on grass than on clay. Should be a good one!
FEDERER[4] did not have the best of starts against Wawrinka as the better ranked underdog broke early and managed to defend his own deal despite a very low first serve percentage. The servers reigned supreme in the second set, but Federer managed to prevail in a tense and possibly vital breaker. This did not sit so well with Wawrinka in more ways than one as he had to call for the doctor. No doubt that leveling the match and seeing his opponent of the day possibly struggle physically boosted Federer's confidence. He continued with his serving clinic, and broke Wawrinka in both following sets. Closing the match was a bit of a struggle, Wawrinka even getting a break point to level the fourth at 5 all, but a confident one-two punch followed by a winning volley snuffed that hope and soon after Federer reached his 9th Wimbeldon semi-final.
vs
RAONIC[8] was not interested in getting surprised by Kyrgios. After losing the first set in a breaker he found a way to avoid this scenario in the second and third sets. Visibly tired, the young australian was no longer able to make any impression in his return games (not like he was able to do much of one in the first place), but the crowd helped him defend his service games and force a breaker. This time though it was all Raonic who raced to a 6-1 lead. Kyrgios took care of his own two serves, managed to steal one of the minibreak back, but, fittingly, Raonic ended the charade with one of his many aces down the T.
I would like to think that Federer has enough tools in his arsenal to defend his serve consistently and get into two or three Raonic service games per set. That being said, if Raonic serves well and there is no break in sight, it puts you under tremendous pressure and a couple untimely errors on grass, be it in a tie-break or a service game, can cost a set. Should be a nerve-wracking one.
Fun WB fact of the day: In 1904 Frank Riesley and Sydney Smith faced each other in the semi-final, but, when the match reached two sets all, they chose the winner with a coin toss! Riesley and Smith were playing in double together and wanted to save some energy for the final they had to play! This kinda paid off as they won the double's final and Riesley also crushed his opponent in the single's final. In that era though the tournament was only a mean to determine the challenger that could then defy the title holder and our crafty coin tossers lost both the challenge matches!