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Dimitrov sweeps into final

London - Bulgarian fourth seed Grigor Dimitrov has booked a Queen's Club final clash against Feliciano Lopez with an impressive 6-2, 6-4 win over world number three Stan Wawrinka on Saturday.

Dimitrov is one of the emerging talents in the men's game and he underlined his growing reputation by overpowering top seed Wawrinka in just 61 minutes at the Wimbledon warm-up in west London.

The world number 13 can now look forward to his third ATP Tour final this season on Sunday against Spanish 10th seed Lopez, who defeated Czech veteran Radek Stepanek 7-6 (9/7), 6-4 in the other semi-final.

And if the 23-year-old lifts the trophy, it will go some way to silencing the critics who claim he should have fulfilled his potential by now.

It's tough to define the word 'breakthrough'," Dimitrov said. "Of course, you would want to be more consistent. I think that's more my word for it.

"Sometimes people make a big deal out of the breakthrough. To me, it's just a stage that you've got to go through.

"Some people find it very easy and acclimate themself pretty fast to the atmosphere and to the stage. Others it just takes time. Everyone is different."

Dimitrov is already the youngest player in the world's top 20, having broken into the upper echelons with a run to the Australian Open quarter-finals before winning titles in Acapulco and Bucharest.

One of his few low moments this year came last month when he was dumped out of the French Open first round by Ivo Karlovic.

He had expected to do well in Paris and admitted the loss sparked several days of soul-searching, ultimately giving him the renewed focus and hunger to succeed at Queen's.

"I was really down after the French Open. I didn't touch a racquet for around five, six days after that," Dimitrov said.

"It was painful. I kept dwelling on it. You go for those long walks and keep thinking about what happened.

"But at the same time that pushed me to practice hard and put me in a really good position.

"I was really positive coming into this week. Next thing you know, I'm in the final. So that's a good sign."

Playing with more freedom, Dimitrov has raced through the draw, adding an admiring Wawrinka to a list of scalps that already includes Andy Murray and Tomas Berdych this year.

"His game is similar to Roger (Federer). He has a one-handed backhand, a big forehand and can serve well," Wawrinka said of a player once dubbed 'Baby Fed'.

"He's been having a great year already, winning two titles. I'm sure he can achieve big things in tennis."

Dimitrov was just too hot to handle as he moved a step closer to his first grass-court title.

The Bulgarian, who has been supported by girlfriend and French Open champion Maria Sharapova this week, took just five games to became the first player in the tournament to break Wawrinka's serve and added another break for good measure to clinch the first set.

There was no let-up from Dimitrov in the second set and Wawrinka, who smashed his racquet in frustration at one point, conceded the decisive break when his forehand missed by the narrowest of margins to surrender a 4-3 lead.

In the second last-four clash, world number 29 Lopez followed up his surprise last eight win over world number six Tomas Berdych with a victory over the week's other giant-killer.

Stepanek, 35, had defeated reigning Wimbledon and Queen's champion Andy Murray in the third round and seventh seed Kevin Anderson in the quarter-finals.

But he ran out of steam against the 32-year-old Lopez, whose last final came 12 months ago when he won the grass-court title at Eastbourne.

"The quality of tennis I played today was amazing," Lopez said.

"Radek also played great. It was a matter of a few points that came my way."

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