The Scotsman

Nishikori stuns Federer as Swiss great pays for error-strewn display

- By SAM JOHNSTON

Roger Federer lost his opening match at the ATP Finals for the first time since 2013 as he went down 7-6 (4), 6-3 to Kei Nishikori in London last night.

An error-strewn display from the 20-time Grand Slam champion allowed Nishikori to take the first set via a tiebreaker despite the Japanese player struggling for consistenc­y himself.

Federer earned the first break points in the opening game of the second set, and took his chance, but Nishikori hit straight back in the following game.

Nishikori, pictured, was far more composed than Federer from that moment on and broke for a 4-2 lead, before closing out the match for a first win over Federer since 2014.

Six-time champion Federer will now likely need to win his remaining two round-robin matches to keep alive his chances of claiming the 100th title of his career.

Earlier, Kevin Anderson made a confident start to his ATP Finals debut with a 6-3, 7-6 (10) win over Dominic Thiem.

Having qualified for the season-ending tournament for the first time, the 32-year-old Anderson produced a dominant serving display to take the first set at the O2 Arena, before saving two set points to come through a tense tiebreaker in the second.

“I think it was important, you know, going out there and getting off to a good start,” Ander- son said. “I definitely felt a little bit nervous.”

The fourth-seeded Anderson, who was runner-up at Wimbledon this year, was taken to deuce in his opening service game, but dropped only one more point on serve in the first set – and wasn’t punished for taking just one of seven break point opportunit­ies on Thiem’s delivery.

Anderson’s groundstro­kes were almost as impressive as his serve, particular­ly in the first set, and drew a series of errors from Thiem in the fourth game, which resulted in the crucial break.

Thiem, who beat Anderson in straight sets at the US Open this year, was struggling for consistenc­y as he made just 48 per cent of his first serves with 12 unforced errors, compared to just five winners.

“I didn’t have a good start. It was not working out at all,” said Thiem, who has now lost his opening round-robin match on all three of his appearance­s at the finals.

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