Croatia’s Marin Cilic reached the Wimbledon final for the first time on Friday with a 6-7(6), 6-4, 7-6(3), 7-5 win over Sam Querrey.
“It’s unbelievable. I have played really well from the start of the tournament,” said 28-year-old Cilic.
“Sam played at a high level especially in the first set. I was 4/1 up in the tie-break and didn’t convert.
“But after that I was better in the return games. I thought the level was really high.
“I’m feeling a positive on the court. It’s extremely important. My emotions are helping me a little bit.”
Cilic fired 25 aces and 70 winners past world number 28 Querrey, the man who ended Andy Murray’s reign as Wimbledon champion in the quarter-finals.
Cilic trails Federer 6-1 in head-to-head meetings and is level at 6-6 against Berdych.
Whoever he faces on Sunday, he said he is ready for the challenge.
“It’s definitely going to be a huge semi-final between Roger and Tomas. It’s an open match,” he said.
“Roger is playing the best tennis of his career on this court. Whoever it is I will be ready.”
Cilic is the second Croatian man to make the final after 2001 champion – and former coach – Goran Ivanisevic.
“I never doubted it. Who knows what will happen in the final? It’s great to see Cilic there,” Ivanisevic told the BBC.
Cilic took a 4-0 career lead over Querrey into Friday’s semi-final, including a marathon 5hr 31 min win at Wimbledon in 2012, the second longest match in tournament history.
There were signs that spectators were in for another long afternoon with no break points at all in the first set as the serve of the two 6ft 6in (1.97m) giants dominated.
However, a Cilic backhand error off a second serve handed Querrey the opener, although the Croatian’s concentration wasn’t helped by a break in play when a woman collapsed in the crowd at six-all in the tiebreak.
Cilic was unable to convert break points in the first and fifth games of the second set but the pressure eventually told and he broke through for the set-deciding game at 4-3.
The third set was equally tight, a break apiece in the third and fourth games with another tiebreak required.
Querrey was a break to the good again in the fourth set, but Cilic clawed his way back to 4-4 before claiming victory with another power-packed forehand winner.
The seventh-seeded Croat will face either seven-time champion Roger Federer or Tomas Berdych in Sunday’s final.