Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

FEDERER OUTCLASSES

DJOKOVIC TO REACH SEMI-FINALS

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Roger Federer lit up the O2 Arena with a dazzling 6-4 6-3 defeat of Novak Djokovic to hand the Serb an early ATP Finals exit and wreck his bid to end the year ranked number one.

In the 49th meeting between the two great rivals, Federer snapped a five-match losing run against Djokovic and gained some consolatio­n for his heartbreak­ing Wimbledon final defeat.

After both men had been beaten by Dominic Thiem earlier in the group, their eagerly-anticipate­d duel was a straight shoot-out to join the Austrian in the semi-finals.

Cheered on by the majority of the 17,000 fans in the arena, Federer produced an astonishin­g display of power, grace and precision and Djokovic simply had no answer.

Djokovic’s first defeat by Federer for four years means Rafael Nadal will end the year as world number one for the fifth time even if the Spaniard fails to reach the semi-finals.

Nadal takes on Stefanos Tsitsipas in the other group on Friday.

Federer had played down talk of revenge when asked about his impending clash with Djokovic, but his victory celebratio­n showed exactly what it meant.

“It was a great performanc­e tonight from me,” Federer, who at 38 continues to defy the passing years, said on court.

Asked what he did differentl­y to the Wimbledon final when he failed to convert two championsh­ip points against Djokovic, the 20-time Grand Slam champion said: “I won the match point!” Djokovic said it had been a “bad match” from his side but admitted Federer had done everything right.

“He was the better player in all aspects,” the 32-year-old said.“i have the utmost admiration for him. What he’s still showing on the court is phenomenal.” England’s soccer team was in action across the city at Wembley on Thursday, but when Federer and Djokovic are on the same tennis court it is always the hottest ticket in town.

Djokovic had reached the final on his last six appearance­s at the ATP’S most exclusive event while six-time champion Federer had only once failed to reach the semi-finals in his 16 previous appearance­s.

Something had to give. From the moment Djokovic doublefaul­ted twice in the third game to invite an early break for Federer, his hopes of extending his proud record looked forlorn.

Federer was seeing the ball like a melon, timing his groundstro­kes to perfection while his serve was unplayable.

He dropped only three points on serve in the opening set and

Djokovic’s only chance was that Federer would cool off.

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