The Day

Federer playing for his 6th title at Indian Wells

- By BETH HARRIS AP Sports Writer

Indian Wells, Calif. — Roger Federer was on the ropes, down two breaks in the second set and another one in the third. Borna Coric thought he was close to toppling the world's topranked player. Not so fast. Federer rallied for a 5-7, 6-4, 6-4 victory in the BNP Paribas Open semifinals on Saturday, extending his career-best start to 17-0 and giving him a chance to win his record sixth title.

"I went for my shots. I was not waiting. I made the right choices all the time," Coric said. "He was just a better player in those specific moments. At the end, he just got through." Barely. "I should have lost a match," Federer said.

He will meet No. 6 Juan Martin del Potro in today's final. The Argentine breezed past No. 32 Milos Raonic of Canada 6-2, 6-3 in 66 minutes for his 10th consecutiv­e match victory and 400th of his injury-plagued career.

"It was surprising to see him serving not too hard, and I broke his serve very quick in both sets," Del Potro said. "That gave me the control of the match."

Federer is 18-6 in his career against del Potro, with two of the losses coming at the U.S. Open, in the 2009 final and last year's quarterfin­als.

"I love to play against him," Del Potro said. "It will be a good challenge to see how my level is against him."

Federer rallied from a 5-7, 2-4 deficit to win the final four games of the second set, breaking Coric twice for the first time in the match.

"It didn't come easy, so I had to go get it," Federer said. "You need to be match-tough, you need to be confident, have experience, and I think I have a bit of all of that right now, and that's the reason I won."

There were five breaks in the third. Federer trailed 4-3 and then broke after two deuces on his way to winning the last three games of the two-hour, 20-minute struggle.

"That's why he's champion," Coric said.

Coric's crosscourt forehand was called out on match point. He challenged the call and the line system showed it was just wide of the sideline.

"I was aggressive and I was pushing him to the limits, but at the end he was better player," Coric said. "I thought he was going to drop, but he didn't. He stayed in the match very, very long, and I just couldn't keep it up anymore."

Federer hasn't started a season so well since 2006, when he won his first 16 matches en route to a 92-5 record.

Until losing the first set, Federer hadn't dropped a set in the tournament.

Trailing a set and 0-2 in the second, the crowd, including Rod Laver and Pete Sampras, seemingly tried to will better shots out of Federer with loud applause and shouts of encouragem­ent.

"Borna played a great match. He was very steady," Federer said. "I can see why he caused a lot of problems to a lot of players, and he's only going to improve from here."

Coric, a 21-year-old from Croatia, was in his first ATP Masters 1000 semifinal. He will jump 13 spots to No. 36 in Monday's ATP World Tour rankings.

Federer, No. 1 again at 36, owns 27 career Masters 1000 titles.

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