Feisty Djokovic steamrolls into Serbia Open semis

BELGRADE, (Reuters) – World number two Novak  Djokovic settled an old score with a childhood rival when he  beat Slovenian Blaz Kavcic 6-3 6-2 yesterday to reach the Serbia  Open semi-finals.

Novak Djokovic

The 23-year old Serb, who will meet compatriot and close  friend Janko Tipsarevic on Saturday for a berth in tomorrow’s  final, showed some nerves in the second set before he stretched  his unbeaten run in 2011 to 26 matches.

Djokovic was 4-1 up when the umpire ordered play to continue  despite heavy rain and facing a break point, the home favourite  sat down and waited for the slippery lines to be mopped up  before he dropped his serve.

But it was only a temporary blip as the winner of this  year’s Australian Open, Dubai Championships and Master series  events in Miami and Indian Wells regained his composure to seal  the match in 1 hour 25 minutes.

“I remember very well losing to Kavcic 10 years ago in an  under-14 tournament, I haven’t forgotten the result either and I  had a score to settle here today,” Djokovic said with a wry  smile in a courtside interview.

“We grew up together and I really wish him all the best in  his future endeavours.

“Pressure is part of the game, especially in front of your  own fans but it’s also a very special feeling to be here and I  am looking forward to playing against Janko.

“The most important thing is that Serbia will have one  player in the final and may the best player win what should be a  very entertaining match,” he said.

Djokovic looked sharp in the opening set and won 14 of 16  points on his first serve, getting the crowd on their feet with  a reflex volley and some delightful backhand winners.

He fired in 18 winners throughout the one-sided contest and  appeared to leave a lot in the tank for the showdown with  Tipsarevic, who beat India’s Somdev Devvarman 6-3 3-6 6-4 in a  rip-roaring contest which lasted 2 hours 38 minutes.

Djokovic won both their previous encounters but Tipsarevic  said he was looking forward to face his Davis Cup team mate, who  steered Serbia to their first title in the competition when they  edged France 3-2 in the Belgrade Arena last December.

“It will be a good test of my credentials and it will show  where I stand at the moment, as playing against the world’s best  is the only barometer of one’s quality,” Tipsarevic said.