Rafael Nadal, of Spain, returns the ball to Mikhail
Youzhny, of Russia, during their Qatar Open quarterfinal in
Doha. REUTERS/Mohammed Dabbous
A stuttering Roger Federer and a rampaging Rafa Nadal
need to clear only one more hurdle before setting up a
tantalising final showdown at the Qatar Open.
Federer appeared to have left his A game behind in the locker
room on Thursday as he dropped his first set this week before
eventually taming Italy's Andreas Seppi 6-3 5-7 6-4.
While the Swiss, who won the last of his record 16 grand slam
titles at the Australian Open two years ago, extended his
winning run to 20 matches, Nadal shunted aside Russia's
Mikhail Youzhny 6-4 6-4.
Hoping to block the much-anticipated Federer-Nadal final will
be a pair of entertaining French showmen.
Jo-Wilfried Tsonga booked a semifinal date with Federer in
Doha for the second year running after rolling over Spain's
Albert Ramos 6-2 6-1.
Gael Monfils made sure that the top four seeds all lived up
to their billings with a 6-2 6-3 win over Serbia's Viktor
Troicki.
Defending champion Federer played Tsonga eight times in 2011.
Although the Swiss came out on top on six occasions, he is
unlikely to underestimate Tsonga's credentials, especially
since the Frenchman beat him at his beloved Wimbledon last
June.
"Both of us struggled getting to the semis," Federer told
reporters. "I struggled today. He struggled in the first two
rounds. But I think when we play each other, it's more
straightforward because we know what to expect. There are no
more secrets."
Tsonga will go into the semifinal in good heart following a
dominant performance against Ramos. The world No 6 was
untroubled on serve and increasingly expansive as he wore
down the fading Spaniard, advancing to the net to hit a range
of backhand, forehand and smash winners.
"It's difficult to play against him (Federer)," Tsonga said.
"I have to be perfect and play my best tennis. I know I can
do it."
Nadal's battle with Youzhny was arguably the match of the
tournament.
After squandering two break points in the opening game
against Youzhny, Nadal made no mistake on his next
opportunity a couple of games later. He dragged Youzny into a
gruelling rally and pumped his fists in delight as the tiring
Russian slugged a backhand into the net.
In the second set, the Russian seventh seed was left
frustrated as he failed to convert a string of break points.
He allowed Nadal to gallop into a 4-1 lead as the Spaniard
peppered the court with a series of sliced backhand and
searing forehand winners.
Former top 10 player Youzhny clawed back one of the breaks
after following up a delightful dropshot winner with a
powerful forehand drive, which closed the gap to 4-5.
However, Nadal would not be denied and clinched victory with
a volley winner.
"I think I played my best match here today," Nadal said.
"It's one of the days I go back to the hotel very, very happy
about what I did. For a lot of moments, I played at very,
very high level, moving very well, going inside the court,
having the control of the point."
Monfils prepared for his battle with Nadal by winning 15 of
the last 20 points against Troicki.
Despite beating the 10-time grand slam champion only once in
nine meetings, he remained unfazed.
"Statistics change," Monfils summed up.
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