Djokovic out, Nadal advances in Indian Wells
by Rebecca Bryan | March 18, 2010
Rafael Nadal (pictured) booked his quarter-final berth with a win over John Isner
Croatian veteran Ivan Ljubicic ousted a weary world number two Novak Djokovic 7-5, 6-3 to reach the quarter-finals of the Indian Wells Masters 1000.
While third-seeded defending champion Rafael Nadal booked his quarter-final berth with a 7-5, 3-6, 6-3 triumph over big-serving American John Isner on Wednesday, Djokovic couldn't keep pace with the blistering serves and clean groundstrokes of Ljubicic, a former world number three now ranked 26th in the world.
Ljubicic said he was delighted to end a five-match skid against Djokovic, calling some of those defeats "brutal".
"I'm really happy to be able to beat him finally," said Ljubicic, whose only prior win against Djokovic was their first meeting in Zagreb in 2006.
His most recent defeats to the Serb had come in the first round of last year's US Open, and in the quarter-finals at Dubai last month.
"I served well. My serve helped me, especially in difficult moments... in the second set I was serving even better than the first," said Ljubicic, who gave himself both of his match points in the final game with two of his 13 aces.
Djokovic saved the first, but on the second Ljubicic came up with another big serve that the Serbian could only sail back across the baseline.
"But also two weeks ago in Dubai I was serving unbelievably," Ljubicic said. "You can't beat Novak only with a serve, but it does help you a lot if you can get a lot of free points off that shot."
Djokovic said he knew what to expect.
"I don't think any match we play is different," he said. "It's more or less based on the service and returns. As much as I get in the rallies, I think I have more chances to win the point. It wasn't the case today.
"My execution was very bad and he played well when he needed to and he served well when he needed to," said Djokovic, who won his second straight Dubai Open title in February then won both of his matches to help Serbia beat the United States in the first round of the Davis Cup in Belgrade.
Djokovic has looked far from sharp since arriving in the California desert, having to save three match points to subdue Germany's Philipp Kohlschreiber in the third round.
"This is a tournament where I definitely didn't feel comfortable on the court," said Djokovic, the 2008 champion. "It's just because I had a very tiring couple of weeks coming from Davis Cup, which was emotionally very exhausting for me."
The tournament has now lost its top two men's seeds, after world number one Roger Federer was stunned by Marcos Baghdatis in the third round on Tuesday.
That left Nadal as the highest-ranked player to make it into the quarters as he withstood a barrage of 22 aces from the 24-year-old American Isner.
World number four Andy Murray was slated to play later Wednesday, taking on Spain's Nicolas Almagro for a quarter-final place.
Baghdatis, who saved three match points en route to his triumph over Federer couldn't hold off Spain's Tommy Robredo, who notched a 7-5, 0-6, 6-4 victory.
Sixth-seeded Swede Robin Soderling advanced with a 6-3, 6-4 victory over France's Jo-Wilfried Tsonga, while Czech Tomas Berdych earned a quarter-final clash with Nadal with a 6-1, 6-3 victory over Serbian Victor Troicki.
Ljubicic next faces Argentina's Juan Monaco, a 3-6, 6-2, 6-1 winner over Spain's Guillermo Garcia-Lopez.
Meanwhile women's fifth seed Agnieszka Radwanska of Poland booked a semi-final berth with a 6-4, 6-3 victory over fourth-seeded Russian Elena Dementieva.
Radwanska has reached her second semi-final of the season without dropping a set, and denied Dementieva a shot at a third title of 2010 - after triumphs in Sydney and the Paris Indoors.
Radwanska awaits the winner of the night quarter-final between second-seeded Caroline Wozniacki of Denmark and China's Zheng Jie.
AFP
- Malaysian Girl Speaks Indonesian After Freak Accident: Report
- Indonesians Buying Up Most Expensive Homes in Singapore
- Funeral on Friday for Student Killed in Rafting Accident
- Adek Berry: The Lady Behind the Camera
- Concerned for Orangutans in Indonesia, US Girl Scouts Lobby for Sustainable Palm Oil
- 7 Motorcycle Girls Arrested for Beating Up Their Own on Bali
- Will Lady Gaga Finally Set Foot in Jakarta?
- Opening Eyes to Tolerance Via Film
- Indonesian Operators Ban Access to LGBT Advocacy Web Site
- 5 More Prisoners Found After Jakarta Jail Break
-
3:21pm | Malaysian Police Detain Saudi ...
another one bites the dust... -
3:21pm | Ariel Could Be Released From J...
Val is a very serious chap -
3:21pm | Jakarta to Start Clearing the ...
wonder who wants this stretch of land ? 20 hectares for 10,000 people.... -
3:06pm | US Consumers Told to Avoid Pas...
can't wait for the responds to this, please let it be Tiffy or Marzuki first, they are my heroes! I would suggest blame it on INTER -
3:05pm | Jakarta to Start Clearing the ...
Nice move. The expert is relocating families in Kampung Melayu which is flooded every time their is a big rain in Bogor. Good planning Mr Fauke. -
3:04pm | Ariel Could Be Released From J...
Val its a sarcastic joke -
2:59pm | Ariel Could Be Released From J...
Marko... thanks BTW - the day Bakrie becomes President of this country is one day before I leave forever -
2:43pm | What’s a Foreign Oil, Gas Exec...
SBD, you are right, Pertamina should be seriously investigated. They have stolen billions from the State and Indonesian people.I remember the first
