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TENNIS

Croatian tennis ace Cilic triumphs in Basel

Red-hot Marin Cilic heads to Paris determined to hang on to his qualifying spot for the ATP year-end finals after defeating Kei Nishikori to lift the Swiss Indoors title.

Croatian tennis ace Cilic triumphs in Basel
Marin Cilic clinches the Swiss Indoors. Photo: Fabrice Coffrini/AFP

The Croatian, 28, triumphed 6-1, 7-6 (7/5) on Sunday over his higher-ranked opponent in a repeat of the 2014 US Open final, where he also defeated Asia's best player.
   
Cilic, ranked 12th in the world, currently holds the last of the qualifying spots for the World Tour Finals in London but will face a battle this week at Paris Bercy in the final event of the regular season to keep the place.
   
Eight players will take part in the prestigious London showpiece on November 13th-20th.
   
“Paris will be deciding everything, I want to finish the regular season in a good way and hope to refresh myself in the next couple of days to be ready again,” Cilic said, after earning his 16th career title from 27 finals.
   
“I now have the first 500 series title in my career. I'm adding it to all my other trophies. It shows me that I'm in a good way, I'm playing very well.
   
“I had pressure all week fighting to qualify for London. But it was a great week for me, I played some good tennis.
   
“I feel great, it was a tough week, there was a lot at stake. I came up with some great tennis despite the pressure.”
   
His Basel success was the second title of the season for Cilic after winning his first Masters 1000 title in August in Cincinnati, beating Andy Murray.
   
“Today I started the match with good energy and motivation, a few balls can decide a lot. I was quite focused in the critical moments,” Cilic said. “My game was really high and level was quite big today.”
   
World number five Nishikori, who already knows that he is on his way to London for the third straight year, refused to make excuses.
   
“I didn't feel I was in there all the time. If I could have won the second set, maybe something would have changed,” he said.
   
“In the end, I didn't feel comfortable and didn't feel the balls well today.
   
“It was a combination of his good tennis and the fact that I was not at 100 percent. In the second set it was close, I had a couple of set points but couldn't convert.”
   
Cilic ended with a modest six aces, producing his last one at just the right moment to earn a pair of match points.
   
He put a forehand long on the first but claimed the match — and the title — when Nishikori hit a double fault on the second.
   
The Japanese, who will also be in Paris, was playing his fifth final of the season — but can boast only the Memphis title from February.

On Friday, top seed and US Open champion Stan Wawrinka slumped to a shock 6-2, 5-7, 6-1 defeat to German qualifier Mischa Zverev in the quarterfinals.

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ROGER FEDERER

Is this the end of the road for Swiss tennis legend Roger Federer?

Roger Federer is talking optimistically about returning to his "highest level" after knee surgery, but does tennis have to start adjusting to a future without the Swiss star?

Is this the end of the road for Swiss tennis legend Roger Federer?
Is it the end of the line for Roger? Photo: Martin BUREAU / AFP

The 20-time Grand Slam winner announced on Wednesday that he would be sidelined until 2021 after his second operation in a matter of months.

Federer remains upbeat, tweeting: “I plan to take the necessary time to be 100 percent ready to play at my highest level.”

In some ways 2020 is a good season to miss after the coronavirus ravaged the tennis schedule. Writing Federer off in the past has proved dangerous.

He returned from a six-month injury lay-off to claim the Australian Open in 2017, winning his eighth Wimbledon crown later that year.

But he will be 40 in 2021 and is now heading into uncharted territory.

Despite his groaning trophy cabinet, there are two factors that will motivate Federer to keep going — the risk of losing his grip on the men's Grand Slam title record and a missing Olympics singles gold medal.

Rafael Nadal has 19 majors, just one shy of Federer's mark and Djokovic has 17.

Spain's Nadal will be fancied to draw level with Federer at the French Open, rescheduled for September, while few would bet against Djokovic winning in New York weeks earlier.

In April, Federer said he was “devastated” when Wimbledon was cancelled for the first time since World War II. Last year he fell agonisingly short at the All England Club, failing to convert two championship points on his own serve against Djokovic.

The Wimbledon grass probably remains his best chance of adding to his Grand Slam collection — he has not won the US Open since 2008 and his only title at Roland Garros came in 2009.

Even though Federer has slipped from the very pinnacle of the game, he is still a major threat to Nadal and Djokovic.

'Golden' ambitions

Last year, the world number four had a 53-10 win-loss record and he reached the semi-finals at the Australian Open in January in his only tournament this year.

Federer, who is still six ATP titles short of Jimmy Connors' all-time record of 109, has one glaring omission from his CV — the Olympic title.

The Swiss won doubles gold in Beijing in 2008 with compatriot Stan Wawrinka but lost in the singles final to Andy Murray in London four years later.

The postponed Tokyo Games will almost certainly be Federer's last opportunity to complete a career “golden” Grand Slam — he will turn 40 on the day of the closing ceremony next year.

Tennis will feel the loss of the elegant Federer keenly when he walks off the court for the last time.

Djokovic and Nadal have been the dominant forces in recent years but the Swiss remains the biggest draw and last month topped Forbes' list of the world's highest-earning athletes.

His last appearance on court was in front of nearly 52,000 fans — touted by organisers as a world record for tennis — at a charity match against Nadal in Cape Town in February.

Federer is nearly always the crowd favourite wherever he plays and has proved a perfect ambassador for the sport since he won his first Grand Slam title in 2003.

He certainly expects to be back and competitive next year.

“I will be missing my fans and the tour dearly but I will look forward to seeing everyone back on tour at the start of the 2021 season,” he tweeted.

The avalanche of support from his adoring fans showed they would miss him too, but they will have to get used to a time when he is gone for good.

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