Federer, Nadal Lead Charge into Australian Open Third Round

January 16, 2019 | By Long Island Tennis Magazine Staff
Federer Crop
Photo courtesy of USTA/Garrett Ellwood

 

Defending champion Roger Federer had to overcome a ready Dan Evans on Wednesday at the Australian Open, but still managed to move through in straight-sets 7-6(5), 7-6(3), 6-3 to secure his spot in the third-round.

“I think I couldn’t pull away early in the match,” said Federer. “Always helps if you sneak a quick break. I might have had that midway through the second set but I think he played very well, to his credit.

I’ve seen him play some really good matches over the years. I see why he can cause difficulties to players. He was feeling it today, I thought. He was very sort of cat and mouse a bit.”

After escaping the first two sets in tiebreakers, Federer converted on the only break point chance he had in the third set to finally pull away and advance.

In search of his 21st Grand Slam title, Federer moves into an intriguing third-round matchup with American Taylor Fritz, who upset 30th seed Gael Monfils 6-3, 6-7(8), 7-6(6), 7-6(5) on Wednesday.

Rafael Nadal faced less resistance in his second-round match as he took out Australian Matthew Ebden 6-3, 6-2, 6-2. Nadal fired 33 winners and had just 15 unforced errors to move through in under two hours.

He takes on 27th seeded Australian Alex de Minaur next. The young Aussie won a thrilling match on Wednesday, downing Swiss qualifier Henri Laaksonen 6-4, 6-2, 6-7(7), 4-6, 6-3.

“It’s going to be incredible, just to be able to step out on court with him. I can’t wait to go out there, try and compete and just give 150 percent,” de Minaur said as he looked ahead to his Nadal clash. “I got the chance to play him in Wimbledon on Centre Court. I feel like I learned a lot from that experience. I just got to focus on my side of the court, have fun, just hopefully take it to him.”

American Frances Tiafoe notched the biggest win of his young career as she ousted fifth-seed Kevin Anderson 4-6, 6-4, 6-4, 7-5.

“It means the world to me,” said Tiafoe. “I lost to Kevin three times last year, and down a set and a break it looked like he was going to get it for the fourth time. But I just went to a different place—I dug insanely deep. It’s all about competing. These guys are insanely good. It’s how bad do you really want it, and I want it real bad.”

Tiafoe will try to carry that momentum into a third-round match against Italian Andreas Seppi.

 


Long Island Tennis Magazine Staff
Pointset
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