Federer mauls Gasquet, Murray labours to victory

PARIS, (Reuters) – Roger Federer produced his ‘A  Game’ yesterday and Andy Murray had to switch to ‘Plan B’ on  the super-fast indoor court to reach the third round of the  Paris Masters.

Federer stepped up his bid to win the Paris tournament for  the first time by sending down a barrage of winners in a 6-4 6-4  hammering of Frenchman Richard Gasquet.

“I’m battling with a little bit of fatigue, but I believe  the confidence can get me through a long way here,” the top seed  said after notching up his 10th consecutive win.

While Federer was booking a date with Czech Radek Stepanek  in double quick time, Murray struggled to find his groove  against Argentine David Nalbandian in the Bercy arena.

Unable to dent Nalbandian’s game, the Briton switched  tactics and his decision to serve and volley paid off as he came  from a set down to sink the former champion 2-6 6-4 6-3.

“I haven’t played on a quicker court since I’ve been on the  tour,” Murray told reporters. “I was struggling to control the  ball, and then changed the tension on my rackets … and felt a  lot more comfortable.”
Nalbandian visibly tired after having his serve broken at  the end of the second set.
At 2-2 in the third the Briton called for the trainer to  massage his right wrist and that galvanised him to take four of  the last five games.

WRIST INJURY

“I think I should be okay for the rest of the tournament,”  the Scot said. “I managed to finish the match and normally, if  your wrist injury is bad you can’t.”

Murray next plays 13th-seeded Croatian Marin Cilic.
Serbian second seed Novak Djokovic was also in trouble early  on against Juan Monaco before recovering to win 6-4 6-3.
“It’s a very fast court … a lot more different than last  year and it’s quite a change that you have to adjust to,” said  defending champion Djokovic.

Djokovic’s next test will be against Frenchman Michael  Llodra, who he could face in the Davis Cup final in December.

Llodra, who is contention with Gasquet, Gilles Simon and  Gael Monfils for singles spots in Belgrade, comfortably  dispatched 16th seed John Isner 6-3 6-4.

Swedish fifth seed Robin Soderling made light work of Simon,  beating him 6-4 6-0 in just over an hour to set up a third-round  match against Stanislas Wawrinka.

World number eight Andy Roddick breezed past Finnish  qualifier Jarkko Nieminen 6-1 6-4. He next takes on Latvian  Ernests Gulbis.

The big-hitting American is trying to qualify for this  month’s ATP Tour Finals in London and holds the last remaining  spot ahead of Spaniard Fernando Verdasco.

“Every match I win is significant at this point … it puts  pressure on the guys behind me,” said Roddick.
Roddick fired nine aces as his serve and volley game  prevailed on the quick surface.
Two others still in the running, Spanish seventh seed David  Ferrer and 11th seed Juergen Melzer, progressed and meet in the  next round.