(MENAFN - Gulf Times) Ruthless
Roger Federer handed wounded Chung Hyeon an old-fashioned schooling
before the overwhelmed South Korean quit with foot blisters trailing 6-1
5-2 in a damp squib of an Australian Open semi-final yesterday.
Federer
was detained for only 62 minutes under the Rod Laver Arena roof as he
set up a final against big-serving Croat Marin Cilic who pummelled
another young gun, Kyle Edmund, on Thursday.
It is the sixth time
Federer has reached a grand slam final without dropping a set — the most
recent at Wimbledon last year when he beat an injured Cilic in the
final.
Although happy to conserve energy for Sunday's final, and even
make it out in time for a spot of dinner, the 36-year-old defending
champion said it had been a 'bitter sweet victory.
'I must admit,
you do take the faster matches whenever you can because there's enough
wear and tear on the body, Federer told reporters. 'When they happen,
you take them.
'I'm just happy I'm in the final, to be honest. That
was the goal before the match today. Not under the circumstances I was
hoping to (reach the final)...
'He struggled clearly with his movement. I was able to take advantage of that. I wish him a good recovery.
It
was an anti-climactic end for Chung, who played superbly to beat fourth
seed Alexander Zverev in five sets in round three and even better in a
straight sets win over six-times champion Novak Djokovic in the round of
16.
The 21-year-old was joined by his agent Stuart Duguid in the post-match news conference who explained what had happened.
'It's worse than regular blisters. Over the last few days, it was blister under blister under blister, he said.
'He had it shaved off. Now it's red raw. They tried injections to see if it numbed the pain. It didn't work.
'I really hurt. I can't walk no more, Chung added.
Federer
admitted after his quarter-final victory over Tomas Berdych that he
knew little about Chung's counter-punching game, having never faced him
before.
He had obviously done some homework though as he swarmed all
over the world number 58 from the first game, feasting on Chung's powder
puff serve to break immediately after choosing to receive first having
won the coin toss.
Bashing winners for fun he repeated the trick twice to grab the opening set in 33 minutes.
When
Chung held serve for 1-1 in the second set, a huge cheer erupted from
an Australia Day crowd who had hoped to witness a classic battle of the
generations.
But Chung, nicknamed ‘the professor' mainly because of
his scholarly white spectacles but also because of a maturity beyond his
years, had no answer to Federer's firepower.
With his movement and
defensive skills — his biggest weapons — compromised he was a sitting
duck as Federer racked up 24 winners in the 57 points he required for
victory.
Federer broke for 3-1 with a dipping backhand pass and when
Chung needed treatment on his foot blisters after losing the next game,
his hopes of becoming the first South Korean to reach a grand slam final
already looked forlorn.
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