Nadal keeps top ranking after making Rome semis

ROME, (Reuters) – Rafa Nadal made sure of retaining  his world number one status at the French Open after cruising  past Croat Marin Cilic 6-1 6-3 in the quarter-finals of the Rome  Masters yesterday.

Rafa Nadal

Nadal showed no signs of the fever that had brought him to  the brink of pulling out on Thursday in a typically clinical  display, hammering the world number 23 to set up a semi-final  against Richard Gasquet. Second seed Djokovic stretched his unbeaten run for the year  to 35 matches after dispatching fifth-seed Soderling 6-3 6-0.  The Serb will meet Andy Murray, who became the first British  player in the tournament’s professional era to reach the final  four after outlasting unseeded German Florian Mayer 1-6 6-1 6-1.

Champion for five of the past six years, Nadal raced into a  4-0 lead, breaking Cilic’s serve with a ferocious forehand  topspinner and backhand crosscourt before taking the first set.

The Croat, who had won one of his previous two meetings  against Nadal, stayed with the Spaniard until the seventh game  of the second set when the topseed moved up an extra gear to  break twice more, bringing his overall win-loss run in Rome to  30-1.

“I started the match with intensity and played  aggressively,” said Nadal. “I was running faster and when you  move your legs faster, the shots come more easily. I played  better but if you want to win a tournament, you have to play  well every day.”

Nadal said his health was improving.

“I was lucky. I felt much better today,” he said. “Yesterday  afternoon I had fever but it improved at the end of the day. I  still had a bit of fever this morning but it was fine before the  match.”

After losing his opening service game against Soderling,  Djokovic stormed back, making the decisive break in the eighth  game with a screaming crosscourt backhand to take the set.

The second set was an ordeal for the big Swede as Djokovic  moved him around the court with a combination of dainty  dropshots and flashing strokes to win the set to love.

Murray began his match with Mayer in ragged fashion,  dropping the first set before storming to victory against the  world number 27 having never got beyond the third round in six  previous visits.