Tennis
Federer earns wobbly win
2012-06-01 20:23
Paris - Roger Federer survived another
awkward French Open assignment on Friday to book a last 16 match-up with
Belgium's David Goffin, the first lucky loser in 17 years to make a
Grand Slam fourth round.
Federer, the champion in Paris in 2009,
overcame battling French world number 89 Nicolas Mahut 6-3, 4-6, 6-2,
7-5, being pushed to four sets for the second match in succession.
Goffin
is the first lucky loser from qualifying to make the last 16 of a major
since compatriot Dick Norman at Wimbledon in 1995 and the first at
Roland Garros since 1978.
The 21-year-old achieved the feat by
beating Poland's Lukasz Kubot 7-6 (7/4), 7-5, 6-1, having originally
lost in the final qualifying round last week.
He was then handed a lifeline when French star Gael Monfils pulled out on the eve of the event.
Jo-Wilfried
Tsonga did his part to keep alive home hopes of a first men's champion
since 1983 when he swept past colourful Italian Fabio Fognini to reach
the last 16.
Fifth seed Tsonga won 7-5, 6-4, 6-4 against the
45th-ranked Fognini and will face Stanislas Wawrinka, the 18th-seeded
Swiss, who defeated French 11th seed Gilles Simon 7-5, 6-7 (5/7), 6-7
(3/7), 6-3, 6-2.
It was Tsonga's second win in two meetings with
Fognini, who reached the quarter-finals last year only for a thigh
injury to force him to withdraw and hand Novak Djokovic a walkover into
the semi-finals.
"I have had some difficult moments here, now I am
happy to be having some good ones," said Tsonga, who has now matched
his best performances of fourth round runs in 2010 and 2011.
Andreas Seppi kept Italian interest alive by reaching the last 16 of a Grand Slam at the 29th time of asking.
The
22nd seed stunned Spain's 14th seed Fernando Verdasco 7-5, 3-6, 6-3,
4-6, 6-2 and could face Djokovic for a place in the quarter-finals if
the world number one and top seed sees off France's world 286 Nicolas
Devilder.
Seppi, who won the claycourt title in Belgrade in the
run-up to Roland Garros, had lost all six of his previous meetings with
Verdasco going into Friday's tie.
Seventh-seeded Czech Tomas
Berdych ended Kevin Anderson's hopes of becoming the first South African
man to reach the last 16 of a Grand Slam for nine years in a third
round slugfest.
The 31st seed from Johannesburg was attempting to
match comptariot Wayne Ferreira who made the fourth round at the
Australian Open in 2003.
But after taking a two sets to one lead,
he ran out of steam in the final set, when he needed treatment on his
left thigh at every changeover, and lost 6-4, 3-6, 6-7 (4/7), 6-4 6-4,
eight minutes short of four hours.
Berdych, a semi-finalist in
Paris in 2010, will next take on ninth seed Juan Martin Del Potro of
Argentina, the 2009 US Open champion, who put out Marin Cilic, the
Croatian 21st seed 6-3, 7-6 (9/7), 6-1.
"When I played him
(Anderson) in the first round in Madrid, he was the toughest player I
faced until the semi-finals," said Berdych, who went on to be runner-up
to Roger Federer in the Spanish capital.
"So I was expecting a tough one today. He is a player who is coming up and playing really well."
World
number 98 Malek Jaziri wasted a great opportunity to become the first
Tunisian man into a Grand Slam third round when he squandered three
match points against Spanish 20th seed Marcel Granollers.
In a
match held over from Tuesday, Granollers edged past Jaziri 7-6 (7/1),
3-6, 6-1, 3-6, 7-5 and will face France's Paul-Henri Mathieu for a place
in the last 16.