The Herald (South Africa)

Rivals through

Federer, Nadal advance in Indian Wells Masters

-

World No 2 Rafael Nadal raced into the third round of the ATP Indian Wells Masters as Roger Federer made a less speedy but still successful start to his quest for a sixth title on Sunday.

Nadal, a three-time Indian Wells winner, needed just 72 minutes to get past Jared Donaldson, 6-1 6-1.

Federer, who is seeking to break out of a tie with top seed Novak Djokovic for most titles in the California desert, looked set for a similarly easy time, but had to turn back a second-set challenge from German Peter Gojowczyk in a 6-1 7-5 win.

Fourth-seeded Federer said he was relieved not to go to a second-set tiebreaker after falling behind 3-1 to the freeswingi­ng German, who is ranked 85th in the world.

The Swiss regained the break and, after saving four break points to make it 4-4, cruised home.

“I struggled a little bit with my serving in that second set and that gave him chances.

“Because he was serving better, he started to swing more freely and then it was tough,” Federer said.

“I'm really happy I found a way in that second set.”

Federer next faces compatriot Stan Wawrinka, a three-time Grand Slam champion currently unseeded as he continues his return from injury.

Wawrinka won a taut thriller against 29th-seeded Hungarian Marton Fucsovics 6-4 6-7 (5/7) 7-5, finally sealing it on his fifth match point after three hours and 24 minutes.

Nadal, playing his third tournament of a year that started with a crushing loss to Djokovic in the Australian Open final and included an early exit in Acapulco, converted five of his six break chances against Donaldson and never faced a break point himself.

He next faces Diego Schwartzma­n, who beat Spain’s Roberto Carballes 6-3 6-1. Nadal is 6-0 against the Argentine.

“Today was a very positive step for me, and the next one is going to be against a player that we know each other very well – we practised a lot of times, and we played some tough matches,” Nadal said.

In other early matches, sixth-seeded Kei Nishikori of Japan survived a scare in a 6-4 4-6 7-6 (7/4) victory over France’s Adrian Mannarino.

Mannarino, ranked 52nd in the world, served for the match at 6-5 in the third.

He could not muster a match point and double-faulted on break point, and that was enough of a window for Nishikori, who opened 2019 with a title in Brisbane and then reached the quarterfin­als of the Australian Open.

Nishikori next faces 67thranked Hubert Hurkacz of Poland, who defeated France’s Lucas Pouille 6-2 3-6 6-4.

Eighth-seeded American John Isner routed Australian qualifier Alexei Popyrin 6-0 6-2.

He will play Guido Pella, who won his first title at Sao Paulo last week.

Pella ended the hopes of another Australian qualifier, Alex Bolt, 7-6 (7/5) 2-6 6-3.

Tenth-seeded Croatian Marin Cilic downed Serbian Dusan Lajovic 6-3 6-4 to book a meeting with 19-year-old Canadian Denis Shapovalov, the 24th seed, who beat American Steve Johnson 6-3 6-4. –

 ??  ??
 ?? Picture: TPN/GETTY IMAGES ?? RAFAEL NADAL
Picture: TPN/GETTY IMAGES RAFAEL NADAL

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa