New Day Dawns for Nishikori With Ouster of Top-Seeded Djokovic
Kei Nishikori's remarkable 6-4, 1-6, 7-6 (4), 6-3 victory over top-seeded Novak Djokovic in the US Open on Saturday made him the first man from Asia to reach a Grand Slam singles final.
- Cristopher Clarey, The New York Times
- Updated: September 07, 2014 07:21 am IST
As Kei Nishikori has kept fighting through imposing obstacles at this U.S. Open, his coach Michael Chang has kept reminding him, "Great effort, but the tournament is not over yet."
It certainly is not. After fighting his way through consecutive five-set matches to earn a semifinal spot against No. 1-seeded Novak Djokovic, Nishikori extended his one-man show of resilience by upsetting Djokovic to reach the final.
His remarkable 6-4, 1-6, 7-6 (4), 6-3 victory Saturday made him the first man from Asia to reach a Grand Slam singles final.
"It's, I don't know, 4 o'clock in the morning," Nishikori, 24, said of the time in his native Japan. "But I hope a lot of people are watching."
If they were not on Saturday, they will be soon. Nishikori, who left home at age 14 to train at the IMG Academy in Bradenton Florida, was a star in his homeland. His run here and his victory over Djokovic will take him to a new level.
"I was a little bit tight," Nishikori said, "especially it was my first semifinal in a Grand Slam, but it's just amazing, amazing feeling beating the No. 1 player."
In Monday's final, Nishikori is set to face No. 14 Marin Cilic, who overpowered second-seeded Roger Federer, 6-3, 6-4, 6-4, in Saturday's second semifinal. It will mark the first time since the 2005 Australian Open that a Grand Slam final will not feature either Djokovic, Federer or Rafael Nadal, who missed this year's U.S. Open with a wrist injury.
The 10th-seeded Nishikori is the lowest seed to reach the final of the U.S. Open since Pete Sampras, who was seeded 17th when he won the title in 2002 in what turned out to be his final professional match. But Nishikori is just getting started and might well have made this kind of breakthrough earlier if not for a series of injuries, including a serious right elbow problem that required surgery in 2009 and knocked him far out of the top 100.
He has long been considered a great talent by people who have seen plenty of great talent, including Nick Bollettieri, the veteran American coach who is the instructor emeritus at the academy in Bradenton that once bore his name.
"He and Xavier Malisse and Marcelo Rios are the best shotmakers I've ever worked with," Bollettieri said in an interview before this season. "If Kei Nishikori could stay healthy, he could be and would be right up with the big boys."
Eight months later, there he was in Arthur Ashe Stadium beating the top-ranked player in the world. Nishikori had played Djokovic twice before; losing in the second round of the French Open in straight sets in 2010 and then upsetting him in 2011 near the end of Djokovic's finest season in the semifinals of the indoor tournament in Basel, Switzerland.
But this was certainly a much grander stage than Basel, and what made his victory all the more remarkable was that he had spent nearly 3 1/2 hours longer on court in this tournament than Djokovic coming into this semifinal.
Nishikori needed five sets and more than four hours to beat Milos Raonic, the No. 5 seed, in a fourth round that ended at 2:26 a.m. Tuesday. He did not get to bed until close to 6 a.m. that morning but then bounced back Wednesday to upset No. 3 seed Stan Wawrinka, the reigning Australian Open champion, in five sets.
"Before he played Stan, I was more concerned that he would still be focusing on the Raonic match," Chang said. " So I was like constantly telling him, 'Hey you've got another match here to play, another match, another match.' Because that tends to be the struggle with players that have a big win and then a letdown following that."
Chang, the American who shocked the tennis world to win the 1989 French Open at age 17, began coaching Nishikori this season, joining a team that included coach Dante Bottini and fitness trainer Hiroto Kon.
"He's been helping me a lot," Nishikori said of Chang. "Him and Dante communicating a lot and it's been working super well, so that's why I'm here."
There was no letdown: not against Wawrinka and not against Djokovic, and Nishikori has now beaten three consecutive players ranked in the top six and thus become the first member of his highly regarded generation of new-wave talents to reach a Grand Slam final, beating Raonic and Grigor Dimitrov to that milestone.
The two-day break between Wednesday's upset of Wawrinka and Saturday's upset was clearly beneficial to Nishikori. So perhaps was the fact that Nishikori played very little before the tournament because of a cyst on his foot and arrived lacking match play but feeling physically fresh.
"He hasn't played before this tournament, so he had a big break," Djokovic said. "He could prepare himself for this tournament. He played some great tennis. I congratulate him for the effort. He was the better player today."
lost to Makarova and Elena Vesnina in straight sets. But Williams, the defending champion and the only major winner among the semifinalists, has looked untouchable in singles, not losing more than three games in any set.
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