Becker capitalises on Davydenko off-day

看板GermanTennis作者時間16年前 (2008/06/25 17:37), 編輯推噓0(000)
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Becker capitalises on Davydenko off-day Tuesday, 24 June 2008 Written by Michael Burke Beck to the future c Prosport / T. Hindley Fourth seed Nikolay Davydenko became the biggest casualty of The Championships so far, going down 6-4, 6-4, 6-4 to the steady German Benjamin Becker. This was the Russian’s fifth first-round defeat in seven years and it came largely due to a misfiring serve, which Becker broke twice in the first set. Standing firm at the baseline, Becker was able to dictate the points, overpowering his opponent with his big forehand. Davydenko, meanwhile, could not shrug off his shaky serve syndrome and was also lacking in the returns department. The first set whizzed by in 17 minutes, Becker sailing to a 5-1 lead before the Russian salvaged some respect by making the German serve the set out. But when you are only winning 44 per cent of your first serve and second serve points at this level you are creating a whole heap of trouble for yourself. Davydenko’s body language suggested he would rather be somewhere else after such an embarrassing start. Full credit to Becker, on the other hand, who capitalised on an off-day for the number four seed on a surface he usually struggles on. In the third game of the second set, Becker forced Davydenko to deuce and narrowly missed out on the opportunity to pounce on another drop in the Russian’s usually exceptionally high serving standards. Becker was following a simple, aggressive game plan that another B Becker used so well during his time at Wimbledon, making it even more improbable that Davydenko would be given the opportunity to engage in the long baseline battles that has established him as a top-five player for the past four years. The match was slipping and sliding away from Davydenko as Becker continued to maintain a high all-round standard, hitting winners on both sides of the court and keeping the rallies short with high-octane tennis. After such a poor start, the odds were against Davydenko managing to impose himself and get back in the game, and that is exactly what happened. The Russian’s serve improved briefly before the net cords and double faults resurfaced and the German raced to an unexpected two-set lead. If the number four seed was going to go through now, he would have to do it in five sets. But it was Becker who was in charge and he continued to dominate with his serve and forehand, the final nail in the coffin coming in the third game of the final set when Davydenko threw away another service game, and with it ultimately, the match. -- ※ 發信站: 批踢踢實業坊(ptt.cc) ◆ From: 123.243.17.71
文章代碼(AID): #18OX6y6H (GermanTennis)
文章代碼(AID): #18OX6y6H (GermanTennis)