Deciding-Set King Nishikori Battles From The Brink At Roland Garros

You can push Kei Nishikori, but finishing him off is an entirely different challenge.

The Japanese star showed why he has the best tour-level deciding-set record in the Open Era on Friday at Roland Garros, battling from a double-break (0/3) down in the fifth set to defeat No. 31 seed Laslo Djere 6-4, 6-7(6), 6-3, 4-6, 6-4, 8-6, advancing to the fourth round on the Parisian terre battue for the fifth consecutive year.

Nishikori has now won 74.4 per cent of his deciding sets, extending his record to 131-45 when pushed the distance. The seventh seed is also 22-6 in five-setters, including 4-1 at Roland Garros.

View Infosys MatchBeats Of Nishikori's Win

Nishikori MatchBeats

The Japanese star has now advanced to the last 16 at 11 of the past 12 Grand Slams he has played. And while he has captured 10 of his 12 ATP Tour trophies on hard courts, he has won a higher rate of matches on clay than on any other surface. With his victory against Djere, he has triumphed in 71 per cent (91-38) of his matches on clay compared to 68.2 per cent (266-124) on hard courts.

For a moment, though, it appeared Djere, this year’s Rio Open presented by Claro champion, would spring the upset. The Serbian, who had never previously reached the third round of a Grand Slam, broke in his first two return games of the fifth set, moving just three holds from earning one of the biggest victories of his career.

But Nishikori — who reached deuce in the Serbian's first four service games of the fourth set, but could only break on one of six opportunities, leading to the decider — broke three times in the final set. And finally, after four hours and 26 minutes, Djere missed long and Nishikori lifted his arms in the air in celebration.

Infosys powers real-time insights for every point

The World No. 7 will next face Frenchman Benoit Paire, who advanced after taking a 6-2, 4-6, 7-6(1) lead against Spaniard Pablo Carreno Busta, who retired due to a right thigh injury.

The 10th time proved the charm for Paire, who is into the fourth round at his home Grand Slam for the first time on his 10th attempt. The Frenchman had advanced to the Round of 16 just twice in 33 previous major appearances.

Paire is finding some of his best form this clay-court season, currently riding an eight-match winning streak after triumphing at last week’s Open Parc Auvergne-Rhone-Alpes Lyon for his second title of the year (also Marrakech). He will try to overcome a 2-6 deficit in his FedEx ATP Head2Head series against Nishikori.

Did You Know?
Djere did not break Nishikori's serve in the first three sets, but did so four times in the final two sets. Nishikori, however, broke seven times in his victory.



from Tennis - ATP World Tour http://bit.ly/2JPJUs1

No comments

Theme images by Jason Morrow. Powered by Blogger.