AO Remarkable Events
As if a
Djokovic loss to Istomin wasn’t enough, we had more surprises:
Mischa Zverev beats Murray.
What is it, sibling rivalry?
Mischa Zverev, who has had a journeyman career as a singles player, has
improved his results substantially over the past few months. Perhaps he’s trying to keep up with his
younger brother Sasha. Sasha Zverev, age
19, has risen rapidly in the ranks over the past year and appears headed for
superstardom. Suddenly, though, older
brother Mischa seems to want to keep pace with Sasha. Mischa played only challenger and future
events between 2012 and 2015, but since then has been improving, and came into
this Australian Open ranked 50 in the world.
He put an exclamation point on his improvement yesterday by knocking #1
Andy Murray out of the AO in four sets.
Murray seemed unable to cope with Zverev’s style, a lefty who likes to
come forward. Novak will be relieved,
because if Murray had won this tournament, the rankings gap between himself and
Andy would have widened substantially.
Now he remains in touch with Andy, but Novak has a lot of ranking points
to defend over the next few months.
In another remarkable performance, Roger Federer beat Kei
Nishikori in 5 sets. When is Roger going
to cease to amaze? He came into this
match with very little match play over the last 6 months, recovering from a
knee injury, and with 35 years of hard tennis yards on him. Nishikori, one of the world’s very best, came
in match tough and playing great tennis.
Still, Roger was able to do it.
This was a match where Roger moved
amazingly well for his age and absence from play, and simply hit the ball too
hard for Kei. He also got many free
points on his serve, which helped lessen the physical punishment. The third set was won by Federer in only 26
minutes. Roger played one loose service
game in the 4th set and lost it, but in the 5th he
quickly broke and seemed in command the rest of the way. Nishikori took a time out for treatment of a
back ailment, but appeared to move well after treatment. I believe the time out had a little
gamesmanship behind it. I don’t think
Nishikori was trying to “freeze out” Federer, but he may have been trying to
buy a little time to collect his thoughts and figure out how to turn things
around. It is true that Nishikori has
had a nagging back problem for years. He
was totally dominating Nadal in Madrid in 2014 before the back problem crippled
him. So the issues here might have been
entirely medical and not at all psychological.
So now Federer plays Zverev.
Zverev will be fresh and has nothing to lose, but it’s hard to think of
a tougher player to deal with than Federer, whose game is so diverse, and who
has so much experience in big match settings.
We’ll see.
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