Boston Herald

Federer, Nadal on to semifinal showdown

- HERALD WIRE SERVICES

WIMBLEDON, England — All these years later, Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal will meet again at Wimbledon for the 40th installmen­t of their terrific rivalry — and first at the All England Club since their memorable 2008 championsh­ip match.

“Such a long time,” Nadal said yesterday.

They moved on to the semifinal showdown everyone’s been thinking about since the tournament draw was released by each overcoming a tough opening set.

A 4-6, 6-1, 6-4, 6-4 victory against Kei Nishikori gave the second-seeded Federer his 100th match win at the All England Club, the first man to reach that total at any Grand Slam tournament. Not long after that ended on Centre Court, the third-seeded Nadal finished off Sam Querrey 7-5, 6-2, 6-2 at No. 1 Court.

Tomorrow’s other semifinal will draw far less attention: No. 1 Novak Djokovic, the defending champion, against No. 23 Roberto Bautista Agut, who’s never been this far at a major.

Looking ahead to what’s next for himself, Federer said: “Obviously, I know people always hype it up.”

Well, why shouldn’t they? These are, after all, two of the greatest players in tennis’ long history, winners of more Grand Slam titles than any other men. Of Federer’s 20, a record eight came at Wimbledon. Of Nadal’s 18, 12 came at the French Open, where he routed Federer in the semifinals last month.

That gave Nadal a 24-15 career edge head-to-head, including 10-3 at the Slams.

But that one was on the clay Nadal rules. This one is on Federer’s territory: grass.

This is their fourth matchup at Wimbledon — and first that won’t come in the final. Federer beat Nadal for the 2006 and 2007 titles, but Nadal won the championsh­ip 11 years ago in a 9-7 fifth set as dusk descended.

“Well, we have a lot of informatio­n on Rafa, and so does he about us,” Federer said. “So you can either dive into tactics and all that stuff like mad for two days — or you’re just going to say: ‘You know what? It’s grass-court tennis, and I’m going to come out there and play attacking tennis.’ And if he can defend that, that’s too good. And if he can’t, well, then, that’s good for me.”

It is the 13th time the Big Three of Federer, Nadal and Djokovic are in the semifinals at a major tournament together. On 11 of the previous occasions, one of them claimed the title.

They all had some shaky moments yesterday.

“The beginning,” Federer said, “was brutal.”

The eighth-seeded Nishikori jumped out to an early edge by breaking in the very first game, enough to give him that set.

But Federer quickly turned things around in the second, conjuring up whatever he wanted, exactly when he wanted it.

His approach shots were beyond reproach. His volleys vibrant. His returns were timed so well, and struck so violently, that one knocked the net-rushing Nishikori’s racket plum out of his hands.

“Overall, I’m just very happy how I’m hitting it,” Federer said. “Feel good off the baseline, too, which is clearly going to be important for the next match.”

Nadal, of course, is still a ball-retrieving, shot-whipping machine.

He did have some trouble closing out the first set against Querrey, an American ranked 65th who was trying to reach his second Wimbledon semifinal.

“I definitely think he’s a guy that can win it again,” Querrey said about two-time Wimbledon champ Nadal.

Djokovic, eyeing a fifth trophy at the All England Club and 16th overall at Slams, used a 10-game run to transform what was shaping up as an even, entertaini­ng quarterfin­al into a 6-4, 6-0, 6-2 romp against 21st-seeded David Goffin.

“I felt,” Djokovic said, “like I managed to dismantle his game.”

Bautista Agut, a first-time Grand Slam semifinali­st, is supposed to be on the island of Ibiza right now, having a bachelor party with a halfdozen pals ahead of his November wedding. Instead, he will play on after beating No. 26 Guido Pella of Argentina 7-5, 6-4, 3-6, 6-3.

“Well,” the 31-year-old Bautista Agut said, “it feels better to be here in London.”

Federer and Nadal are pleased to be here too.

“I know they haven’t played here in a long time. It seems a little more exciting, more special, they are playing (here),” Querrey said. “I’ll be watching on Friday.”

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? JOB WELL DONE: Roger Federer (left) shakes hands with Kei Nishikori after winning their Wimbledon quarterfin­al in four sets yesterday.
GETTY IMAGES JOB WELL DONE: Roger Federer (left) shakes hands with Kei Nishikori after winning their Wimbledon quarterfin­al in four sets yesterday.

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