Novak Djokovic moves into Shanghai Masters semi-finals

Sport360 staff 16:59 16/10/2015
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Mail
  • Pinterest
  • LinkedIn
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • WhatsApp
  • Pinterest
  • LinkedIn
  • Djokovic is in stunning form.

    Novak Djokovic eased into the Shanghai Masters semi-finals on Friday after a brilliant start by Bernard Tomic fizzled into one of the Australian’s trademark damp squibs.

    Top-ranked Djokovic was pushed all the way in a thrilling opener but after he edged the tiebreak 8/6, it was plain sailing as Tomic capitulated 7-6 (8/6), 6-1.

    The two swapped breaks early in the first set and with 20th-ranked Tomic standing up to Djokovic in the rallies, they were inseparable heading into the tiebreak.

    – Bouchard: Tennis ace files lawsuit against USTA
    – GALLERY: Top-10 women’s grand slam winners

    – Aus Open: Organisers announce prize money boost

    But Tomic’s head dropped after he limply netted on his opponent’s third set point and he was broken three times in a car-crash of a second set before double-faulting on match point.

    Earlier, Rafael Nadal’s renaissance took a big step forward as he whipped a flagging Stan Wawrinka for the loss of just three games to reach the semi-finals.

    Nadal beat the world number four 6-2, 6-1 to bring up his first win over a top-five player in more than a year and extend a hot streak after he also reached last week’s China Open final.

    Spain’s Nadal was on court for just 64 minutes against Wawrinka, who said he was feeling the effects of his marathon three-setter against Marin Cilic late the previous night.

    The French Open champion from Switzerland, who won last week in Tokyo, made 34 unforced errors and was on target with just 45 percent of his first serves as he folded meekly.

    “For sure physically I feel the effect of last night, but also the past 10 days. I’ve been playing a lot, winning Tokyo,” Wawrinka said.

    “Today I was just struggling a little bit. It’s that simple. Against Nadal you cannot do anything if you’re not 100 percent.”

    Nadal will play Jo-Wilfried Tsonga in the last four as he bids to keep up his record of winning at least one Masters title every season since 2005.

    More importantly, hours of extra work on the practice court look to be paying off as after a tough year, Nadal looks to recapture the form that brought him 14 Grand Slam titles.

    “Being in the semi-finals is a great result for me. I didn’t play any semi-finals on hard court this year, now I am playing (them) two weeks in a row,” he said.

    “That’s a big improvement for me. In terms of confidence, in terms of the level of tennis, I am playing better. Very happy for that because I am working so hard.”

    Earlier Tsonga laboured to a three-set win over big-serving South African Kevin Anderson, 7-6 (8/6), 5-7, 6-4 to go into the semi-final with Nadal.

    Recommended