Federer crushes Murray to end year on top

LONDON, (Reuters) – There are plenty of special effects inside the O2 Arena for the ATP Tour Finals but nothing could match the sight of Roger Federer in full flow as he beat Andy Murray yesterday to guarantee the year-end No.1 ranking.

Federer did not have to be at his magical best but after a  wobbly start he took control midway through the match and treated the 17,500 capacity crowd to some shots that only he can play, reeling off the last six games for a 3-6 6-3 6-1 victory.

His second three-set win in Group A meant that world number two Rafael Nadal can no longer close the points gap in the rankings and Federer will have the honour of finishing the year as the world number one for the fifth time in his career. Only Pete Sampras, who managed the feat six times in the 1990s, and Jimmy Connors, who did it five times in the 70s, have achieved that since rankings were introduced in 1973.

Federer also becomes the only man other than Ivan Lendl in 1989 to regain the year-end crown after being toppled from the summit by Nadal last year.

“After having a rough 2008, coming back this year and being able to dominate and play at the top when the depth in tennis is  so great at the moment, I think it’s a wonderful achievement,”  Federer, whose year began in a shattering defeat by Nadal in the  Australian Open final, told reporters. “It’s official. It’s a wonderful feeling. I think this is  more the night to celebrate number one than celebrate the  victory over Andy really.”

While Federer is untouchable in the rankings, the  intricacies of tournament’s unique format mean that his place in  the semi-finals here is not yet guaranteed after Juan Martin del  Potro’s earlier victory over Fernando Verdasco meant that all  four players in Group A can still progress.

Federer tops the table with two wins but defeat by Del Potro, the man who stopped him in his tracks in the U.S. Open  final, tomorrow and victory for Murray against Verdasco would mean calculators are needed to work out the final standings.

FELT NERVOUS
Towering Argentine Del Potro found his range to beat  Verdasco 6-4 3-6 7-6 in the day session to make up for his  defeat by Murray on Sunday, meaning that five of the six singles  matches played here so far have gone the distance.

“I felt nervous because if I lost, I go home,” the  21-year-old Del Potro, who hopes to have Argentina striker  Carlos Tevez watching against Federer, told reporters.

“It was important, the victory today, to get confidence. I  hope to play my best tennis against Roger.”
There was a huge sense of expectation as Murray and Federer  took the spotlight in the evening session for their 10th career  meeting, six of which had been won by Murray, including a  sensational scrap 12 months ago in Shanghai, the former host  city for the tournament.

Federer broke Murray’s serve in the opening game but the  Scot hit back immediately to raise the noise levels in the  darkened arena that has proved a spectacular backdrop for the  world’s top eight players to strut their stuff.

Federer played a poor game to drop serve in the sixth game  and Murray consolidated the break with a slam-dunk smash that  would not have looked out of place when the Chicago Bulls played  an NBA game against Utah Jazz at the O2 last month. When Murray claimed the first set, T-shirts were fired into  the crowd by organisers but the party turned flat for Murray’s  fans from then on as he faded badly.

“I served so poorly that anyone would have looked good  against me tonight,” world number four Murray told reporters.