Szlia
Member
Friday Report: Quarter final from the bottom of the draw.
From the get go Benneteau looked defeated. Maybe the accumulation of matches and the stress involved in such tournement caught up with him, maybe he knew he was not 100% fit and as a result did not believe in his chances today, but in any case he competed poorly. On the other hand, Djokovic played his best match of the week, so after barely an hour it was done and dusted.
Isner arrived in his quarter final as the leader in 2nd serve points won in the tournement, but a very focused and unexpectedly calm Gulbis managed to put enourmous pressure on the tall american's delivery that barely managed to win 20% of the points on his second delivery during the first set. A healthy first serve percentage allowed him to face only a single break point (that was also a set point). Gulbis was several time brought to 30-30, but he managed to reach the tie break without having to defend a break point. Isner served brilliantly though the tie-break, so a single mini-break was enough to earn him the first set.
Out of nowhere Gulbis broke Isner to love in the first game of the set and was very close to get a double break a little bit later. Sadly, both his first serve percentage and his efficiency behind his second serve plummeted, Isner proving to be very consistent in the baseline rallies. As a direct result, Gulbis found himself in very long service games where game points and break points were too plentiful for comfort. Here again, Gulbis proved a lot more level headed than his usual self, shrugging off big misses on big points to follow them by big serves or impressive winners. The poor quality of his play caught up with him as he was serving for the set: a double fault here, an unforced error there, some deep returns by Isner and that's all she wrote. In a second breaker in as many set, Isner once again raised the level of his game and left almost no opening on his serves while Gulbis served a double that propelled the american to a 4-2 lead that a couple unreturned serves brought to 6-3. On the first match point, on Gulbis' serve, Isner totally miss-hit a backhand that landed awkwardly short, forcing Gulbis to rush the net, but the lack of planning left him open for a down the line passing shot that Isner executed for his first backhand winner of the match.
So we have our semis:
FederervsDolgopolov
The swiss better manage his backhand well, because Dolgopolov demonstrated through the week how deadly his backhand down the line can be. Hit flat on high balls with a very compact movement, it really catches his oponents by surprise, so if Federer hits his backhand cross court with a lot of top spin and without finding a good angle, he will be put under pressure. The same is true if he goes down the line as Dolgopolov as a technically awkward but very efficient top spin forehand cross court that could force Federer to cover a lot of ground (too much in fact) to defend on his forehand side. I say: bring on the slice, all the better if they stay low, but even if they are somewhat floaty it will force Dolgopolov to generate his own pace instead on relying on the pace of the incoming shot.
As for Dolgopolov he better raise his first serve percentage significantly. Serving at 40ish percent can do the trick against a Nadal that is often content just to enter the point or against a Raonic that for most their match could not find the court with his groundies, but against an in-form and aggressive Federer, that could prove costly.
DjokovicvsIsner
The two of them met in the Indian Wells semi once before. Isner won 7-6 (surprise!) in the third that time. If Isner plays a solid match, it will be a good test to gauge Djokovic's level of confidence. If he is doubting, get agitated, tight and frustrated, he could very well drop serve and allow Isner to reach his third Master 1000 final.
From the get go Benneteau looked defeated. Maybe the accumulation of matches and the stress involved in such tournement caught up with him, maybe he knew he was not 100% fit and as a result did not believe in his chances today, but in any case he competed poorly. On the other hand, Djokovic played his best match of the week, so after barely an hour it was done and dusted.
Isner arrived in his quarter final as the leader in 2nd serve points won in the tournement, but a very focused and unexpectedly calm Gulbis managed to put enourmous pressure on the tall american's delivery that barely managed to win 20% of the points on his second delivery during the first set. A healthy first serve percentage allowed him to face only a single break point (that was also a set point). Gulbis was several time brought to 30-30, but he managed to reach the tie break without having to defend a break point. Isner served brilliantly though the tie-break, so a single mini-break was enough to earn him the first set.
Out of nowhere Gulbis broke Isner to love in the first game of the set and was very close to get a double break a little bit later. Sadly, both his first serve percentage and his efficiency behind his second serve plummeted, Isner proving to be very consistent in the baseline rallies. As a direct result, Gulbis found himself in very long service games where game points and break points were too plentiful for comfort. Here again, Gulbis proved a lot more level headed than his usual self, shrugging off big misses on big points to follow them by big serves or impressive winners. The poor quality of his play caught up with him as he was serving for the set: a double fault here, an unforced error there, some deep returns by Isner and that's all she wrote. In a second breaker in as many set, Isner once again raised the level of his game and left almost no opening on his serves while Gulbis served a double that propelled the american to a 4-2 lead that a couple unreturned serves brought to 6-3. On the first match point, on Gulbis' serve, Isner totally miss-hit a backhand that landed awkwardly short, forcing Gulbis to rush the net, but the lack of planning left him open for a down the line passing shot that Isner executed for his first backhand winner of the match.
So we have our semis:
FederervsDolgopolov
The swiss better manage his backhand well, because Dolgopolov demonstrated through the week how deadly his backhand down the line can be. Hit flat on high balls with a very compact movement, it really catches his oponents by surprise, so if Federer hits his backhand cross court with a lot of top spin and without finding a good angle, he will be put under pressure. The same is true if he goes down the line as Dolgopolov as a technically awkward but very efficient top spin forehand cross court that could force Federer to cover a lot of ground (too much in fact) to defend on his forehand side. I say: bring on the slice, all the better if they stay low, but even if they are somewhat floaty it will force Dolgopolov to generate his own pace instead on relying on the pace of the incoming shot.
As for Dolgopolov he better raise his first serve percentage significantly. Serving at 40ish percent can do the trick against a Nadal that is often content just to enter the point or against a Raonic that for most their match could not find the court with his groundies, but against an in-form and aggressive Federer, that could prove costly.
DjokovicvsIsner
The two of them met in the Indian Wells semi once before. Isner won 7-6 (surprise!) in the third that time. If Isner plays a solid match, it will be a good test to gauge Djokovic's level of confidence. If he is doubting, get agitated, tight and frustrated, he could very well drop serve and allow Isner to reach his third Master 1000 final.