Swiss world No. 2 Roger Federer on Friday survived a serious challenge from Daniel Gimeno-Traver of Spain to edge into the semi-finals of the Istanbul Open after a three set battle lasting almost two-and-a-half hours.
Gimeno-Traver, 29, the world No. 62, was in no way overawed by the occasion as he met Federer for the first time, with the Swiss eventually pushing through to win 7-6 (7/3), 6-7 (5/7), 6-3.
Federer showed exquisite touch at times, but the Spaniard put up strong resistance.
Photo: AP
The 17-time Grand Slam winner was kept in place in a tight first set, only moving ahead in the tiebreak, which he took with a gorgeous backhand crosscourt dink that ravished the crowd.
Playing with aggression and abandon, Gimeno-Traver raced to a 5-2 lead in the second set, but Federer pegged him back to force another tiebreak. Against the odds, Gimeno-Traver raised his game once more with some impressive shot-making, taking the breaker 7-5 when Federer tamely pushed a service return into the net.
However, Federer showed his class in the final set, taking it 6-3 despite showing signs of frailty on his serve, which forced him to save four break points.
Federer, who is looking to fine tune his skills on the red clay of Istanbul ahead of the French Open later this month, said he was happy for about tougher-than-expected encounter.
“The point was to win the match,” Federer said. “It was a good match, although maybe I could have won it in two sets.”
“He [Gimeno-Traver] played well and fought hard. It gives me confidence to have played in a match like this,” he added.
However, Federer admitted he had been “frustrated” with some of his play. Federer will be looking to toughen his serve, which was broken twice by Gimeno-Traver and had a first serve percentage of just 64 percent.
In the semi-final scheduled for yesterday, Federer was to meet Diego Schwartzmann of Argentina, who overcame fourth seed Santiago Giraldo of Chile in a bizarrely upside-down match 0-6, 6-2, 6-2.
He remains on course to meet second seed Grigor Dimitrov of Bulgaria in today’s final after the world No. 11 overcame Ivan Dodig of Croatia in straight sets 6-4, 6-3. The Istanbul Open is the first ATP World Tour event held in Turkey.
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