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Sports / Tennis

Tennis: Djokovic beats Ferrer to secure Rome final spot.

Published: 16 May 2015 - 09:03 pm | Last Updated: 14 Jan 2022 - 12:13 am

 

Rome - Serbia's Novak Djokovic swept David Ferrer aside in straight sets on Saturday to qualify for the final of the Italian Open, where he will meet either Stan Wawrinka or Roger Federer.

Djokovic, the defending champion, had warned of the danger of Ferrer on Friday after his quarter-final victory over Japan's Kei Nishikori.

But Ferrer, the Spanish seventh seed and renowned clay court specialist, was broken early in the opening set as Djokovic raced to seal the set 6-4.

Ferrer battled hard to break Djokovic's service in a thrilling sixth game of the second set where advantage switched hands several times before the Spaniard sent a backhand return out.

Ferrer had never made the Italian Open final and his chances appeared to dip soon after those efforts.

The Spaniard lost focus and precision and eventually Djokovic earned the break in the ninth game to take a 5-4 lead, the Serbian sealing the match with his next service game.

The win keeps Djokovic on track for his fourth Rome title, famously stopping Rafael Nadal from winning an eighth crown in the Italian capital in 2014.

He felt encouraged by a performance in which he held serve against "one of the best returners in the game". 

"It's very encouraging when you know you haven't lost a serve against one of best returners in the game, like Ferrer," said Djokovic.

"He's a great competitor who always makes you play an extra ball."

Ferrer's failure to pounce on the break point chances he had worked so hard to earn ultimately proved his downfall.

The Spaniard admitted: "I served very good this week and I've had good percentages but I have to take my chances when I get them.

"I think I had one break at 5-4 in first set then 3-2 for me in second I had two break points which I didn't make.

"Against the number one in the world it's very difficult to win if you don't take those chances," added Ferrer, who provoked a chorus of laughter when responding to one journalist who asked him to confirm rumours he smoked.

"Smoke? No, if I smoke then I can't do my job as a tennis player!"

AFP