Federer flying but Djokovic stands in his way

MELBOURNE, (Reuters) – Roger Federer made a quick  dash into an eighth straight Australian Open semi-final yesterday but Novak Djokovic’s resounding win over Thomas Berdych  was a warning the Swiss cannot yet count on a sixth final.

Djokovic was close to his best in a 6-1 7-6 6-1 win over the  Czech sixth seed which suggested the Serbian, the 2008 champion  here, could again be the man to break Federer and Rafa Nadal’s  virtual duopoly of grand slam titles over the last few years.

Caroline Wozniacki, under huge pressure to vindicate her  number one ranking with a maiden major title,  made heavier work  of getting past a dogged Francesca Schiavone to reach her first  Melbourne Park semi, where she will meet China’s Li Na.

With 16 grand slam titles to his name, Federer has nothing  left to prove to anyone — least of all that he is the best  player in Switzerland — and the defending champion simply  outclassed compatriot Stanislas Wawrinka 6-1 6-3 6-3.

The second seed, gunning for his fifth Australian Open  title, first defused Wawrinka’s serve before picking him apart  with his full repertoire of shots.

“I think it was a good match for me,” Federer said. “For  some reason, I was able to return him well. On my own service  games I was really good, too. I think that really set the tone  for a good match for me.”

Wawrinka, who Federer fondly refers to as “Stan”, said he  was playing the best tennis of his life going into the first  grand slam quarter-final between two Swiss but served just one  ace compared to 24 against Andy Roddick in round four.

“It wasn’t an easy match for him,” Federer added. “The  scoreline suggests maybe it was easier than it looked like. He  really got into the match, especially in the second set. But I  was able to mix it up well and just keep him on his toes.”

BOGGED DOWN

Djokovic rampaged through the first set to silence Berdych’s  band of bare-chested cheerleaders before getting bogged down in  a dogfight in a 78-minute second.

Berdych, who beat the Serbian on his way to the Wimbledon  final last year, unleashed his fearsome forehands to forge 4-1  ahead but Djokovic broke and celebrated with a fist-pump. The Czech suggested the third seed was “lucky” to win the  tiebreak but there was no argument about the third set which  Djokovic raced through in 38 minutes.

“Today has been a real test, because he’s … a very  difficult opponent,” said Djokovic. “”I’ve played one of my best  tennis (matches) in the last couple months.

“I have nothing to lose playing Federer, who’s the title  defender here. We all know everything about him. I have to  believe in myself in order to win that match.”

Wozniacki found herself a set and a break down to Francesca  Schiavone, a player 10 years her senior, before rallying to  overcome the tiring French Open champion 3-6 6-3 6-3.

The 20-year-old nearly paid the price for her lack of  aggression in a lively contest against the Italian, who bounded  around the court from the start despite having less than 48  hours to recover from her four hour, 44 minute victory over  Svetlana Kuznetsova.
Schiavone hit 14 winners to one to claim the first set and  moved 3-1 ahead in the second before four consecutive errors  handed the momentum to Wozniacki who rattled off the next six  games to take control of the match.

“She’s a very difficult player to play against because she’s  mixing it up quite a bit and she knows how to slice,” said  Wozniacki. “So it’s very difficult, but I managed to keep my  head cool, and it worked out.”

Li dropped her opening serve against Petkovic but recovered  to dominate her opponent, hammering flat groundstrokes deep into  the court to seal a 10th consecutive victory in 80 minutes.

Petkovic, 23, conceded she had been outclassed in her first  grand slam quarter-final before declaring the big-hitting  28-year-old was her tip to claim the year’s first major title.