Berdych Snaps 0-17 Skid to Nadal to Reach Aussie Open Semis

January 27, 2015 | By Long Island Tennis Magazine Staff
Berdych_Crop_1
Photo credit: Adam Wolfthal

While the Northeast part of the United States was blasted with a blizzard on Tuesday, the weather was in the mid-60s and sunny on the other side of the world in Melbourne, Australia for the Australian Open quarterfinals.

On a mildly cool day for an Australian summer, seventh-seeded Czech Tomas Berdych put on a cold-blooded performance against third-seeded Spaniard Rafael Nadal.

Berdych had lost 17 straight matches to Nadal dating back to the 2006 Madrid quarterfinals, but entered Tuesday’s quarterfinal match playing arguably the best tennis of anyone in the tournament. The 29-year old Czech thumped Nadal in straight sets 6-2, 6-0, 7-6(5) to move into the final four Down Under. He came out firing in the opening set and was the far superior player on court Tuesday.

He took advantage of 10 unforced errors from Nadal in the opening set. The Czech broke serve on each of the chances he got as he ran away with the first set 6-2.

Things stayed the same in the second as Berdych handed Nadal a 6-0 set loss for the first time since 2011. Berdych had just four unforced errors in the frame and showed off his baseline game with winner after winner down the lines.

Nadal came out fighting in the third set as the 2009 champion would not go quietly. The two exchanged holds all the way into a tiebreak. The Spaniard saved a couple of match points but Berdych was just too tough in the breaker. He took a 5-1 advantage before eventually closing it out 7-5 to move into the semifinals.

Berdych fired 46 winners to just 21 unforced errors and broke Nadal five times.

“I was definitely ready for it,” said Berdych, who reached the Melbourne semifinals for the second consecutive year. “I set up my plan and stuck with it all the way through for three sets. I started playing well, but you’re playing Rafa—you have to keep playing until the last point. You’re playing with one of the greatest tennis players ever, so you have to expect he will bring something.”

Nadal struggled with his serve throughout the match, spraying six double-faults which really allowed Berdych a number of break point chances. He had more unforced errors than winners and was never really able to get himself within striking distance.

“It just was not my day,” said a gracious Nadal after the match. “I didn’t play with the right intensity, with the right rhythm, and the opponent played better than me. You have to play well to win against a player like Tomas.  I didn’t play my best today. He played better than me and that’s it.”

Berdych will look to continue his run down under when he meets sixth-seeded Andy Murray in the semis. Murray, who’s former coach Dani Vallverdu now works with Berdych, knocked off Australian Nick Kyrgios 6-3, 7-6(5), 6-3 in his quarterfinal bout Tuesday. Berdych leads the all-time head to head series 6-4.


Long Island Tennis Magazine Staff
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