The Daily Telegraph - Sport

Federer suffers ‘hiccup’ against bugbear Thiem

Swiss defeated 7-5, 7-5 on day one of ATP Finals Djokovic swats aside Berrettini in straight sets

- By Simon Briggs TENNIS CORRESPOND­ENT at the O2 Arena

Roger Federer will have to go the long way round if he is to maintain his extraordin­ary record of qualifying for the semi-finals on each of his nine previous appearance­s at the

O2 Arena. In a slightly sluggish dayone performanc­e at the Nitto ATP Finals, Federer was outplayed last night by 26-year-old Austrian Dominic Thiem – a man who has become something of a bugbear for him – losing 7-5, 7-5.

The pair also met in Indian Wells and Madrid, and Thiem came out on top on each occasion. He now leads Federer 5-2 in their head-tohead series.

Most pundits had expected Group Andre Agassi to turn into a straight shoot-out between the Wimbledon finalists – Federer and Novak Djokovic. But while Djokovic

swept through his opening match in 63 minutes, Federer was on the back foot from the first game, in which Thiem’s rasping returns forced an early break.

Thiem is the Tigger of the men’s tour – a whirling dervish of bouncy energy who strikes the ball with a huge, windmillin­g swing of his right arm. Yesterday, he was a step too quick for Federer, and more mentally resilient as well.

The crucial moment was the break point Thiem saved in the middle of the second set, after being pushed so wide that he found himself standing outside the doubles alley. Few players would have even reached that ball, but Thiem did, and then somehow fired a venomous forehand over the high part of the net that Federer was unable to handle.

“Just maybe first-round hiccups a little bit,” Federer replied when asked what had gone awry for him. “Not hitting your spots on the serve when you need to, getting into trouble early in the service games, which maybe doesn’t happen later in the tournament.”

Thiem was delighted with his win against an opponent he described as “the best player of all time”. It was a good day all round after he had earlier congratula­ted his French girlfriend Kristina Mladenovic for her feats in the Fed Cup final in Perth.

“I didn’t watch it,” Thiem said last night. “It was too early and I couldn’t disrupt my preparatio­ns. But she won three points in the match, beating the world No1. I am super happy for her and nobody deserves it more than her.”

In the afternoon match at the O2 Arena, Djokovic had launched into his campaign with almost nonchalant ease, squashing 23-year-old Italian debutant Matteo Berrettini by a 6-2, 6-1 scoreline.

Berrettini fits the template of the half-a-dozen twentysome­things now emerging to challenge the establishe­d stars. He is tall, dark and handsome – a sponsor’s dream – and his serve had the speed-gun spinning in the early stages, reaching a high point of 140 mph. Not that it mattered. Djokovic was so comfortabl­e that he could have been playing Tetris at half speed.

Fizzing down from Berrettini’s 6ft 5in frame, the ball almost seemed to gain speed off the slick surface. But Djokovic kept meeting it with the effortless timing of a batsman who has been at the crease for two sessions already. “I think he was returning unbelievab­le,” said a philosophi­cal Berrettini.

After 62 matches in 2019, Djokovic might have been expected to feel at least a touch of weariness. To the chagrin of his rivals, though, he has recovered from the left shoulder issue that afflicted him at the US Open. In an upbeat post-match press conference, he looked so fresh that he could have been one of the young newbies here himself.

“You are obliged to draw that last drop of energy that you have in order to finish the season in the best possible way,” Djokovic said.

 ??  ?? At a loss: Roger Federer shows his frustratio­n during his defeat by Dominic Thiem
At a loss: Roger Federer shows his frustratio­n during his defeat by Dominic Thiem

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