Djokovic to face Murray in Dubai semis

Novak Djokovic

DUBAI, (Reuters) – World number one Novak Djokovic beat fellow-Serb Janko Tipsarevic 6-1 7-6 in the quarter-finals of the Dubai Tennis Championships yesterday to set up a meeting with Andy Murray in the last four.

Novak Djokovic

Murray, who wasted six match points and overcame a knee injury to beat Tomas Berdych 6-3 7-5, faces Djokovic for the first time since the Serb triumphed in a five-set epic in the Australian Open semi-finals in January.

Roger Federer is also through to the semi-finals after beating Mikhail Youzhny 6-3 6-4 and will face Argentine Juan Martin Del Potro, who beat France’s Jo-Wilfried Tsonga 7-6 6-2, today.

Djokovic, seeking a fourth straight Dubai title, bullied Tipsarevic from the outset, breaking to go 3-1 ahead in the first set of their night encounter.

Tipsarevic, ranked a career-high ninth in the world, put up little resistance, netting a lazy backhand to give Djokovic a double break and an unassailable 5-1 lead.

He made a better fist of the second set, matching Djokovic’s pounding groundstrokes in a series of ferocious rallies from the baseline.

Yet the bespectacled Tipsarevic remained erratic. Serving at 2-2, he dispatched three aces and two double faults in the space of six points as he eventually held.

The set went to a tiebreak. Tipsarevic, serving second, went 3-0 up with a brilliant forehand winner down the line. Djokovic came back to level at 4-4, but a mishit gifted Tipsarevic a set point on serve. The 27-year-old’s demons returned as he made another double fault and Djokovic eventually saw out the match with a forehand winner to clinch the tiebreak 8-6.

“It was a very tense second set,” Djokovic said in a court-side interview. “Towards the end, we both had chances and both got quite nervous and made some unforced errors.

“We’ve known each other for a very long time and there are no secrets. We’re very good friends, but we’re both professionals.”

KNEE PROBLEM

Murray, who went into his match with a 3-1 losing record to Berdych, appeared to be cruising at one set up and 2-0 ahead in the second.

However, with the Briton’s movement becoming increasingly laboured, Berdych levelled at 3-3 as both players hugged the baseline on a soporific centre court, the stands barely half full and temperatures topping 30 degrees Celsius.

The Czech was on top but Murray dug in and broke once more, playing a forehand cross-court shot from wide of the tramlines that Berdych had no reply to for a 6-5 lead.

Murray, 24, wasted six match points on serve, but he eventually triumphed when Berdych put a forehand long.

“I had a problem with it (the knee) since Brisbane and it’s come and gone,” Murray told reporters.

“It was a bit sore right before the tournament.  I didn’t feel it at all in the first couple of matches, and then right at the beginning of the second set I felt it.”