The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Novak Djokovic books place in record eighth Melbourne final.

TENNIS: Injured Swiss gave himself ‘3% chance’ of winning Australian semi-final

- ELEANOR CROOKS

Roger Federer went into his Australian Open semi-final against Novak Djokovic giving himself a “3% chance” of victory and branded the experience “horrible”.

Djokovic will contest a record eighth final at Melbourne Park on Sunday after a 7-6 (1), 6-4, 6-3 victory over his old rival.

It was their 50th meeting, with Djokovic now leading 27-23, but this had a very different feel to most of their previous encounters given there were doubts over whether fed er er would even take to the court.

The 38-year-old’s roller-coaster run through what on paper was a very kind draw had left him bearing the scars of two extraordin­ary contests against John Millman and Tennys Sandgren.

Federer had somehow saved seven match points in beating Sandgren in the quarter-finals despite the onset of a groin problem.

He took another medical timeout after the first set of this match and his movement was clearly affected again, particular­ly moving out to his forehand.

He finished the match feeling he had squeezed everything he could from the fortnight, saying: “At the end of the day, I guess I’m very happy. I’ve got to be happy with what I achieved. It was the maximum to get at this tournament, especially after the Millman and the Sandgren match.

“Today was horrible, to go through what I did. Nice entrance, nice send-off, and in between is one to forget because you know you have a 3% chance to win. You’ve got to go for it. You never know. But, once you can see it coming, that it’s not going to work anymore, it’s tough.”

Despite the poor omens, including the fact he had not beaten djokovic at a grand slam since 2012, it was fed er er who came flying out of the blocks.

He was all over Djokovic’s serve, breaking twice and moving to the brink of a third with the Serbian at 1-4, 0-40.

Djokovic held on and that proved to be the turning point. Federer still had a chance to serve out the set but, by then, his opponent had found a better rhythm and he broke back to love.

The Serb went to play a brilliant tiebreak and from there it was largely a question of how long Federer could hang on.

Djokovic – who has never lost at Melbourne Park once he has reached the last four – admitted he was thinking too much about his opponent early on.

He said: “I was trying to focus on myself. I’d been told by the team as well to prioritise my own things rather than really thinking about how he’s feeling or how he’ s going to move, howhe’s goin gto play – but it’s easier said than done.”

It is one of Federer’s more extraordin­ary statistics that in more than 20 years of playing at the top level he has never failed to complete a match.

He revealed he talked with his team about that possibilit­y here and was grateful it did not come to that.

Djokovic paid tribute to Federer on court, and said afterwards: “Respect, it’s all I can say. I did have retirement­s throughout my career. I know how it feels when you’re hurt on the court.

“Obviously, he was hurting. Respect to him for trying his best. It’s unfortunat­e that he was not at his best.”

Djokovic can close to within three grand slams of Federer if he beats either Dominic Thiem or Alexander Zverev on Sunday.

●britain’s Joe salisbury is through to his first grand slam final after he and Rajeev Ram won their men’s doubles semi-final. The 11 th seeds beat alexander bublik and Mikhail Kukushkin of Kazakhstan 4-6, 6-3, 6-4 on Margaret Court Arena.

●Scotland’ s jamie murray and american partner Bethanie Mattek-sands face Australian duo John-patrick Smith and Astra Sharma in the semi-finals of the mixed doubles today.

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 ??  ?? Novak Djokovic, left, consoles an injury-hampered Roger Federer after the Serbian star won their semi-final in straight sets in Melbourne.
Novak Djokovic, left, consoles an injury-hampered Roger Federer after the Serbian star won their semi-final in straight sets in Melbourne.

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