Roger Federer scraped into the third round of the Hamburg Masters with a 6-3
2-6 6-4 win over Juan Monaco on Wednesday, while Rafael Nadal stretched his
claycourt winning streak to 78 matches.
 Swiss player Roger Federer serves to
Argentina's Juan Monaco during their match at the Hamburg Masters Tennis
tournament in Hamburg May 16, 2007. Federer won the match 6-3 2-6 6-4.
[Reuters] |
World number one Federer had to save five break points to avoid going a break
down in the deciding set against the Argentine qualifier before completing an
unconvincing win in one hour 56 minutes.
Second seed Nadal also looked well below par as he struggled to impose
himself in the first set against fellow Spaniard Oscar Hernandez, although he
eventually won 7-5 6-1.
Nadal goes on to face the Russian Igor Andreev, who was the last man to beat
him on clay, back in April 2005 in the quarter-finals in Valencia. Andreev
outlasted the German Philipp Kohlschreiber 6-7 6-1 6-4 to take his place in the
last 16.
"The fact that it was Andreev who beat me in Valencia doesn't make it
anything special," Nadal said at a news conference. "But he's a very good
player, with an unbelievable forehand and it's going to be a tough match.
"I just hope the sun comes out."
Play on the centre court took place under the roof, and with the rain lashing
down outside there were only a handful of completed matches on day three of the
2.1 million euros tournament.
The top two seeds were joined in the third round by Spain's Carlos Moya, who
beat Czech 10th seed Tomas Berdych 3-6 7-5 7-6 outside before the rain started,
and 16th seed Lleyton Hewitt, who beat Juan Ignacio Chela of Argentina 6-2 7-6.
Federer, playing his first match since splitting with part-time coach Tony
Roche, did little to suggest that he will challenge Nadal at the French Open
later this month.
He started with an impeccable service game and looked in reasonable shape
throughout the first set but both his footwork and his usually unerring forehand
deserted him as the Argentine took control.
The unforced errors kept on coming but he managed to hold on and force a
break point for 5-4 in the decider, turning a desperate save into a winner down
the line. Monaco conceded defeat when he let a backhand drift wide on match
point.
"It was a hard fought win but maybe that was just what I needed," said
Federer, who went out early in Rome last week.
"I've spent more time on the practice courts than in matches lately and I
need to pick up as many wins as possible now going into the French Open."
Federer, who has never won at Roland Garros, needs to take the claycourt
title to become only the third man after American Don Budge and Australian Rod
Laver to hold all four majors at the same time.
He goes on to face either Marat Safin or Juan Carlos Ferrero in what should
be another good test in the third round.