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You are here: Home / News / Sports / Federer beats Nishikori, wins Swiss Indoors title

Federer beats Nishikori, wins Swiss Indoors title

November 12, 2011 By Northwest Asian Weekly

Kei Nishikori (left) and Roger Federer

By Graham Dunbar
The Associated Press

BASEL, Switzerland (AP) — Roger Federer ended his 10-month trophy drought on Sunday, Nov. 6, by outclassing Kei Nishikori 6–1, 6–3 in the Swiss Indoors final.

Federer was emotional as he thanked his hometown fans after winning for the fifth time in six years at the event where he once worked as a ballboy.

“It’s always the greatest for me to win the title here. See you next year,” he said on court in Swiss-German.

Federer showed the full range of his shot-making to school the 32nd-ranked Japanese, who stunned top-ranked Novak Djokovic in the semifinals.

“He was too good for me today,” said the 21-year-old Nishikori, who described Federer as “my idol. I tried to do my best, but he wouldn’t let me.”

Federer’s 68th career title was just his second this season.

He won the season-opening event in Doha, Qatar, and had not reached a final since losing in the French Open to Rafael Nadal in June.

Now ranked No. 4 at age 30, Federer was playing his first event as a player ranked outside the top three since he won his first Wimbledon title in 2003.

“It’s been a great week. I got better as the week went on and I saved the best for last,” he said.

Nishikori started brightly on his own serve, but Federer broke after reeling off three straight winners.

Federer dropped just one point on his own serve in the first set and fired flat ground strokes to all corners of the court.

He repeatedly pressured Nishikori’s serve and took the set on his opponent’s double fault.

Nishikori fended off break point chances to hold serve early in the second, then showed his speed and defensive strengths by outlasting Federer in a long rally. The reprieve was brief and Federer broke again to lead 4–2.

He was serving for the match when Nishikori earned his first breakpoint chance, which Federer saved with a powerful serve.

Federer took his first match point with an overhead smash at the net as Nishikori scurried to field shots deep beyond the baseline.

Nishikori will rise to a career-best ATP ranking around No. 25 on Monday, also the best ever by a Japanese man.

The Basel lineup originally included five top-10 players, with Federer and Djokovic returning from six-week breaks after the U.S. Open and Davis Cup matches.

“It has been a long time since I felt so good physically,” Federer said. “I’m at a different point in my career to the younger guys, I have to focus on what’s better for my body, my mind, my family, and I think it was the right decision.”

However, Federer won without playing anyone ranked better than No. 15 Andy Roddick of the United States in the quarterfinals.

An injury-hit week saw Djokovic hampered by right shoulder pains against Nishikori, while Britain’s Andy Murray withdrew one hour before his first-round match.

Mardy Fish of the United States and Serbian Janko Tipsarevic retired in their opening matches having completed just seven games combined, and seventh-ranked Tomas Berdych of the Czech Republic was eliminated by Nishikori, who was a wild-card entry.

Federer now heads to the Paris Masters, which starts Monday without second-ranked Rafael Nadal and with doubts over Djokovic’s fitness.

“I have never been able to win there,” Federer said. “I am hungry and fired up and that is how you want to be at this stage of the season.” (end)

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Filed Under: Sports Tagged With: 2011, Andy Murray, Andy Roddick, BASEL, Czech Republic, Davis Cup, French Open, Kei Nishikori, Paris Masters, Qatar, Rafael Nadal, Swiss Indoors, United States, Vol 30 No 46 | November 12 - November 18, Wimbledon

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