The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

Serena, Federer both cruise into fourth round

- By Howard Fendrich

NEW YORK >> There was no slow start to this U.S. Open outing for Roger Federer, who bristled at the suggestion that he might have played a role in some favorable scheduling.

After dropping the opening set in each of his initial two matches for the first time in 19 appearance­s at Flushing Meadows, the No. 3-seeded Federer was back at his absolute best Friday in a 6-2, 6-2, 6-1 victory over Dan Evans, accumulati­ng a 48-7 edge in winners as the opening act in the Arthur Ashe Stadium day session that began at noon.

Evans acknowledg­ed 20time major champion Federer’s superiorit­y. How couldn’t he?

But the 58th-ranked player from Britain also thought the timing was “a bit disappoint­ing,” because his rain-postponed secondroun­d match was played Thursday, whereas Federer got to play Wednesday under the Ashe roof.

Being first up on Friday’s program meant Evans had to be back on court about 18 hours after he’d left the tournament grounds.

“It was always going to be a competitiv­e advantage for me . ... Luck was on my side,” Federer said, although he did add that his team was asked about whether it had a preference for when to play.

“But that doesn’t mean, like, ‘Roger asks, Roger gets.’ Just remember that, because I have heard this (stuff) too often now,” he said, with a more colorful word choice. “I’m sick and tired of it, that apparently I call the shots; the tournament and the TV stations do. We can give our opinion. That’s what we do. But I’m still going to walk out (on court), even if they schedule me at 4 in the morning.”

Tournament spokesman Chris Widmaier would not discuss specifics of conversati­ons between tournament officials and representa­tives of any player.

“That was the schedule we put forth, and we’re comfortabl­e with the decision,” Widmaier said.

When a reporter asked Evans whether he made any requests about a later start time, he replied: “You think a guy who has my ranking has any say in that?”

“There is probably about four people in this tournament who has a say when they play,” Evans said. “Maybe three.”

Truth be told, this one could have been contested at any hour on any day and the outcome might not have changed. Evans has now faced Federer three times, each at a Grand Slam tournament, and lost all nine sets they’ve played.

“I guess he has every shot,” Evans said, “so it’s not ideal to have an opponent that has every shot.”

Federer, who faces No. 15 David Goffin next, displayed a bunch of them, too.

The leaping, over-theshoulde­r volley packed with pace. The drop volley winners. The forehand passes. The serve with which he won 21 consecutiv­e points in one stretch. The returns that accumulate­d 14 break points, converting half.

Federer went from making 17 unforced errors in the first set of his previous match to finishing with 19 for the entire match against Evans.

“You almost tend to forget what happened,” Federer said, “and you move forward.”

That’s exactly what Serena Williams did, too.

She lost the opening set of her second-round match against 17-year-old Caty McNally before coming back to win, then was much better in a convincing 6-3, 6-2 victory over Wimbledon quarterfin­alist Karolina Muchova.

Williams seized control with a seven-game run that began after she trailed 3-2 at the beginning.

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 ?? SARAH STIER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Roger Federer returns a shot to Daniel Evans during round three of the US Open on Friday in New York.
SARAH STIER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Roger Federer returns a shot to Daniel Evans during round three of the US Open on Friday in New York.

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