advertisement
Peaking at the right time has been a trademark over the latter part of his career for Roger Federer – and the 20-time Grand Slam champion is at it, again.
The six-time champion advanced to the last four of the ATP Finals for a record-extending 15th time with a 6-4, 6-3 victory over Kevin Anderson on Thursday, 15 November.
Chasing the 100th title of his career, Federer needed only a set to advance and produced his best performance so far at the season-ending tournament to end the round-robin stages with a 2-1 win-loss record.
It sure hadn’t, after an opening-match defeat to Kei Nishikori on Sunday, 11 November – his first loss in a tournament opener at the London Finals since 2013.
But Dominic Thiem's 6-1, 6-4 victory over Nishikori earlier had left Federer with a modest task to go through, while also ensuring that Anderson became the first South African ever to reach the semi-finals.
Federer looked as if he was about to give up a break advantage for the second time in as many service games when he dropped to 0-40 attempting to close out the opening set at 5-4, but the Swiss world number three found his first serve when it mattered most to hold.
Anderson hadn't faced a break point in winning his first two matches. Federer, though, broke him twice more in the second set to claim top spot in the group and likely avoid a semi-final meeting with top-ranked Novak Djokovic.
“That was a little bit disappointing because I felt like I played some really good tennis so far,” Anderson said. “But the plus side is I'm through to the semis. That feels great.”
The previously impenetrable Anderson serve wilted, with two double faults gifting Federer a 4-3 lead. Much to the surprise — and disappointment — of the partisan crowd at the O2 Arena, the Swiss great handed the break straight back with a series of errors.
However, Federer steadied himself and made a delicate drop volley to break once more in the following game, before eventually closing out the set to maintain his record of having only missed the semifinals once in 16 appearances at the tournament.
Federer lost just four points on serve in the second set. He used a backhand slice to break for 4-3 and the same shot brought up two match points at 3-5, 15-40.
“I think I had an aggressive-playing mindset,” Federer said. “A good variation as well with my slice.”
Having saved a match point on his way to securing a five-set quarterfinal victory over Federer at Wimbledon, Anderson threatened another comeback as he won a 21-shot rally to get back to deuce, but there was to be no repeat this time.
Two more Anderson forehand errors ended the match and Federer won the group by virtue of their head-to-head record.
With Djokovic clear favorite to top his group, which concludes on Friday, 16 November, Federer has boosted his chances of avoiding the in-form Serb until the final.
(At The Quint, we question everything. Play an active role in shaping our journalism by becoming a member today.)