Cape Argus

Greek phenom KO’s Swiss master

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ROGER Federer’s bid for a hat-trick of Australian Open titles was crushed yesterday as Greek wunderkind Stefanos Tsitsipas rose up to floor the Swiss master and become his nation’s first Grand Slam quarter-finalist.

In a match pitting the oldest and youngest players left in the men’s draw, the 20-year-old Tsitsipas overhauled Federer 6-7 (11/13), 7-6 (7/3), 7-5, 7-6 (7/5) under the lights of Rod Laver Arena, sparking delirium among Greek fans out in force at Melbourne Park.

The 37-year-old Federer will rue his chances, having failed to convert any of the 12 break points he took from Tsitsipas over the course of a riveting clash laden with sparkling shot-making.

Instead, it was Tsitsipas showing a wise head on young shoulders in a final tiebreak of unrelentin­g tension.

When given a match point after Federer slapped a forehand long, he converted it clinically, forcing a backhand error from the Swiss to announce himself on one of the game’s biggest stages.

“There’s nothing I can describe, I cannot describe it, I am the happiest man on earth right now,” Tsitsipas said. “Roger is a legend of our sport, he showed such good tennis over the years. I have been idolising him since I was six.

“I didn’t lose my patience, stayed in those rallies. It was very important to save those breakpoint­s.”

Tsitsipas may be set for even bigger prizes, with a semi-final on offer should he beat 22nd-seeded Spaniard Roberto Bautista Agut.

There was no easing in to the intergener­ational battle, with Tsitsipas having a first serve cancelled for twice falling foul of the clock in the opening game. He had to stave off two break points to hold.

Sparkling winners sang off both racquets as the first set flew into an epic tiebreak of blown chances and brave saves.

Tsitsipas finally relented when he pushed a forehand wide, having been wrongfoote­d by a deep and venomous shot.

Lesser opponents might have fallen into a funk against the frontrunni­ng Swiss but Tsitsipas stayed brave under fire.

He saved eight break points in the second set to keep Federer at bay yet had no such gifts on his opponent’s serve.

The Greek stared down four set points when serving at 5-4 and finally held with a net-rush and a volley.

He fired a backhand crosscourt into the net-bound Federer’s sneakers to earn three set points in the tiebreak, then converted the first with a crushing forehand winner that kissed the line in the corner.

Federer became concerned as more break points went begging in the third set, and he was soon clinging desperatel­y on serve.

It came to a head at 6-5 down, with Federer’s first serve going missing in four successive points and the set lost with a trio of unforced errors on forehand.

The Swiss held on until deep into the decider but it seemed time was catching up with him.

Tsitsipas, 17 years his junior, never dropped his guard, and Federer will leave Melbourne Park without a quarter-final appointmen­t for only the second time in 18 years.

 ?? | EPA ?? STEFANOS Tsitsipas of Greece stunned Roger Federer yesterday.
| EPA STEFANOS Tsitsipas of Greece stunned Roger Federer yesterday.

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