Tennis

Federer defeats Nishikori in 5 sets to book quarter final spot

Roger Federer dug in his heels to stop Kei Nishikori on Sunday at the Australian Open, rallying past the fifth seed 6-7(4), 6-4, 6-1, 4-6, 6-3 in three hours and 23 minutes. Federer secured a milestone 200th win over a Top 10 opponent, becoming the first active player to achieve the feat.

“He played his heart out and I thought he played a great match, I’m happy to be a part of it,” said Federer. “He was hanging tough and playing really well on the big points. I was telling myself to stay calm and this is what I trained for in the offseason. This is a big moment for me in my career.”

The four-time champion exhibited great resolve in fighting back for his 25th career five-set victory. He will feature in the quarter-finals at Melbourne Park for the 13th time in the last 14 years, with a date against Mischa Zverev awaiting on Tuesday. Federer won their previous two FedEx ATP Head2Head encounters, most recently on the grass of Halle in 2013.

Roger Federer showed his readiness to fill the Murray-Djokovic-shaped hole at the Australian Open by outclassing Kei Nishikori in five sets to make the quarter-finals.

While the top two players in the world leave Melbourne, a chance for Federer to add to his 17 major titles has opened up, and this performance at Rod Laver Arena was a reminder that he remains capable of replicating his full repertoire of brilliance, Nishikori going down 6-7 (4-7) 6-4 6-1 4-6 6-3.

Federer let his emotions show after wrapping up victory, an indication perhaps that he believes number 18 could be on the cards.

World number five Nishikori took the opening set on a tie-break, after Federer had fought back from 5-1 down, a stunning backhand that just took some paint with it earning the Japanese the crucial mini-break in fine fashion.

Momentum had swung Federer’s way in a five-game winning run, however, and the second set was a nail-biting affair, both players scrapping hard from deep before a Nishikori double fault cost him dearly in a set of no other chances.

Now with his tail up, Federer served out for 1-1 with just seven shots and he took the lead in a punishing set for the 2014 US Open finalist, Nishikori’s second serve a constant avenue for Swiss success as the great master took just 26 minutes to move in front, echoing his swift destruction of 10th seed Tomas Berdych in the previous round.

Nishikori showed sensational grit to force a decider – somehow holding serve as Federer forced him to cover all angles of the court – another stunning passing shot, this time forehanded, doing the business for Nishikori.

But Federer’s class told in the fifth, catching a physically struggling Nishikori off guard with a fizzing forehand that the Japanese could only net for an immediate break before checking off a few hallmarks – numerous serves up the tee, and a backhand around the net among them – en route to victory.

Mischa Zverev is next up for Federer and Andy Murray’s demise at the hands of the German will put the 35-year-old on red alert, but a potential semi-final with compatriot Stan Wawrinka is already a mouth-watering prospect.

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