Roger Federer still can’t figure out Rafael Nadal in Australian Open

Roger Federer still can't figure out Rafael Nadal in Australian OpenMelbourne, Australia: Roger Fedrer had been failed to beat Rafael Nadal. Federer hadn’t beaten Nadal in seven years in a grand slam and on a chilly night in Melbourne the world No. 1 kept the streak alive, improving his record over the Swiss to 23-10 overall as he advanced to the Australian Open final.

The Spaniard pulled out a tight first set and then cruised to a 7-6 (7-4) 6-3 6-3 victory Friday to set up an encounter with Federer’s compatriot, Stanislas Wawrinka.

Nadal said to media, “I played a lot of times against Roger, and a lot of times I played great against him, So probably that’s why I had this success against him.”

If Nadal wins Sunday he would rise to 14 majors and tie American Pete Sampras — in attendance at Rod Laver Arena during a rare foray to a grand slam in retirement — for second on the men’s all-time list behind Federer.

Federer told, “Playing Murray or Rafa is day and night, It’s just every point is played in a completely different fashion and I have to totally change my game.”

Edberg was a serve-and-volleyer who triumphed at Wimbledon twice, and Federer wasn’t afraid to approach the net.

However, he has used the tactic in the past against Nadal and on Friday won only 55% of net points.

Indeed Nadal didn’t think Federer tried much new — saying he perused YouTube and watched some of their 2012 Melbourne semifinal, which he also won before losing the title match to Novak Djokovic.

Nadal said, “I think he tried to play very aggressive, taking the ball very early.” “But if you go to YouTube and you see the video of the 2012 match, you will see that he was playing very, very aggressive, too, especially the beginning of the match.”

“So nothing is completely new.”

Nadal’s passing shots left the crowd gasping, especially a forehand down the line in the final game.

Edberg said, “Coming into the match I thought we would have a chance today but the way the match came about, Rafa played very, very well and Roger didn’t have that many chances.”

He also said, “Playing against Rafa at this level is very hard.” “It wasn’t enough today, but I think he’s made a lot of progress over the last three months,” he added

“It’s looking good for the rest of the year. He still has a way to go before he is back to the level where he can be.”

Edberg said the match might have turned out differently had Federer broken early in the first set. He likely was referring to the fourth game, when Nadal escaped a 0-30 hole.

Nadal raced to a 5-1 lead in the tiebreak, closed out the set and broke on his eighth chance of the match to take a 4-2 stranglehold in the second.

By that time Nadal took a medical timeout for a lingering blister on his left palm and Federer complained to the chair umpire — not for the first time in his career — about the left-hander’s grunting.

Despite the loss, Edberg remained upbeat about Federer’s chances of achieving an 18th major.

Edberg said, “Roger had a tough year last year, at least now he feels healthy, which is No. 1. No. 2 he needs to put in a lot of work, which he is doing.”

“He just needs to gain a bit more momentum, a bit more confidence. That will come with time. I think in a few months you should see him even better than what we’ve seen this week.”

Bureau Report

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