Nadal bounces Berdych, sets up Ljubicic clash
BY MARK LAMPORT-STOKES
Relevant offers
Rafa Nadal stayed on track for a successful title defence at the Indian Wells ATP tournament with a commanding 6-4 7-6 victory over Czech Tomas Berdych in the quarter-finals.
The Spanish left-hander came from 3-1 down in the second-set tiebreak, winning the last three points of the match at the Indian Wells Tennis Garden to book a place in the last four against big-serving Ivan Ljubicic.
Croat Ljubicic, who turns 31 on Friday, earned himself an early birthday present by powering past Argentina's Juan Monaco 4-6 6-2 6-1 earlier in the day to reach the semi-finals.
Third seed Nadal, twice champion at Indian Wells, broke Berdych twice to take the opening set in just over an hour on a blustery evening at the showpiece stadium court.
After the players traded service breaks in the seventh and eighth games of the second, the set went into a tiebreak, which Nadal clinched when the 19th-seeded Czech netted a backhand.
"I played really well, especially the first set," the Spanish world number three told reporters after beating Berdych for the sixth time in a row.
"The first eight, nine games of the match were at an unbelievable level, later the wind came a little bit and it was more difficult to play.
"I played aggressive with decision and that was the match," added Nadal, who has shaken off the knee injury that forced him to abandon his Australian Open title defence in January.
Former world number three Ljubicic unleashed 11 aces and 39 winners to wrap up victory in one hour, 47 minutes against Monaco on a hot afternoon in the California desert.
VICTORY LEAP
Ljubicic sealed the win by firing down a first serve at 138 mph that Monaco was unable to return, prompting the Croat to leap into the air and thrust his right arm skywards in celebration.
"It's a great win and a great present to have a day off just before the semi-finals," Ljubicic said after reaching the last four in an ATP Tour event for the first time since his victory in Lyon in October.
"I got a phone call from my brother just after match. He said that in the Croatian time zone, I finish just a couple seconds before my birthday, so it's fantastic," he added with a broad grin.
"I'm playing fantastic tennis," said the Croat, who eliminated second-seeded Serb Novak Djokovic in the fourth round. "Now the key is to keep going."
Monaco broke 6ft 4in (1.93m) Ljubicic in the seventh game of the match to take the opening set but the 20th-seeded Croat then took control with a deft mix of power and creativity.
He broke the Argentine's serve twice in both the second and third sets to become the first Croat to reach the last four at Indian Wells since Goran Ivanisevic in 1996.
- Reuters
Sponsored links
Hurricanes looking for a confidence-boost
Phoenix's Muscat insists suspension not deliberate
Capital take chances at softball champs
Hurricanes prop Goodes ready for testing year
West Australian to wear gloves for Firebirds
Super teams prepare for mid-season interruption
Josh Brodie out to prove his worth
Kiwis hope to stump Proteas with spinners
All Blacks to train twice during Super Rugby
Cutting honing new-look softball team
Ngaio quake-prone classrooms closed
Irish Strait swimmer makes good progress
Police photographer wins snap competition
New artificial pitch planned for Kilbirnie
Student wins top dollar for top marks
Lloyd Morrison gets Town Hall funeral
Goodman Fielder to slash New Zealand jobs
$25k Sevens costume comp to return
Wellington start-up wins Webstock award
Reasons for visa denials to be kept secret
Cook Strait swim crossing today
Kiwi sales put sparkle back in jeweller
West Australian to wear gloves for Firebirds
High cost of living mars return to NZ
Ngaio quake-prone classrooms closed
I'm no ticket scalper, says Mallard
Man tried to sneak 663kg explosives on ferry
Attacker offered choice of assaults
Wellington gears up for Homegrown
Quake risk strategic route map
High cost of living mars return to NZ
I'm no ticket scalper, says Mallard
Fear of dangerous rift from wealth gap
Wellingtonian's debate the capital's quake safety
Mallard sells festival tickets online at profit
Editorial: Abuse intervention to test government
West Australian to wear gloves for Firebirds
Are you worried about a big earthquake in Wellington?