Roger Federer eased closer to a ninth title at the Halle grass court tournament on Friday when he demolished defending champion Florian Mayer of Germany 6-3, 6-4 in the quarter-finals.
The world number five, building up to an assault on an eighth Wimbledon title in July, will next face Karen Khachanov, who defeated fellow Russian Andrey Rublev 7-6 (10/8), 4-6, 6-3 in his last-eight clash.
Federer, 35, has yet to drop a set after three matches in Halle this week while his win on Friday took his head-to-head record against Mayer to 8-0, with five of those wins coming on grass.
“It was important to be aggressive off the baseline and make him feel my variation and the power I can bring to the court,” said top seed Federer who has now reached the semi-finals in Halle on 13 consecutive occasions.
“And then having good footwork, to see the short ball, the floater, where I can come in and knock it off with a volley. I think I did it very well. I had lots of chances to even go up a double break in the second set.”
Federer, who hit 11 aces and 32 winners, said facing Khachanov on Saturday will present a new challenge for him.
“It will be interesting. He’s big and strong and seems super excited to be on tour and he’s working hard,” said the Swiss.
“I don’t know him that well yet so it’s a match where I’ll most likely focus on my own game. Make sure I serve well, because he can go through spells where he can serve big. It could be somewhat similar to how I played today.”
Saturday’s other semi-final will see German fourth seed Alexander Zverev face Frenchman Richard Gasquet. Zverev defeated Spanish seventh seed Roberto Bautista Agut 6-7 (6), 7-6 (1), 6-1 while Gasquet saw off Robin Haase of the Netherlands 6-1, 3-6, 6-1.
Reading
-
1
The story of how one family from Maharashtra built a thriving Hindustani music scene in Kanpur
-
2
‘Kandukondain Kandukondain’ at 25: An enduring charmer about losing and finding love and happiness
-
3
Ramachandra Guha: Manmohan Singh helped unshackle India’s economy – but also enabled Modi’s rise
-
4
Why is a Bahujan writer questioning the legacy of Fatima Sheikh, an associate of Savitribai Phule?
-
5
Uganda’s ‘rolex’: The many meanings of the quintessential street food
-
6
The murder of a journalist and the forgotten Maoist war in Bastar
-
7
A new book investigates journalist Gauri Lankesh’s assassination and its effect on Indian democracy
-
8
‘Sita’s Voice in the Assamese Ramayana’: A rebellious Sita and translating classical Assamese texts
-
9
Why the draft personal data protection rules are contentious
-
10
Start the week with a film: ‘Pepe’ is the (possibly apocryphal) story of Pablo Escobar’s hippo