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Soderling exit opens draw for Del Potro at Indian Wells

Posted: 15 Mar 2011 04:21 AM PDT


Another round of tennis in the sizzling high 80s at Indian Wells and
another seed's chances drain away like water into the desert sand.
Robin Soderling has been one of the form players of 2011. He came into
the season's first Masters with an 18-1 match-winning record and a
tour-best three titles for the year. It is no accident, then, that he
overtook Andy Murray at the start of the year and has stayed there ever
since.

To add a little more sheen to his confidence, he also played a winning
role in Sweden's Davis Cup tie just 10 days ago.

But his third-round match against the more diminutive—by six
inches—Philipp Kohlschreiber always promised to be a close affair.

There are certain match-ups that deliver a synergy beyond what the
rankings promise. The first round encounter between Roger Federer and
Igor Andreev was such a one.

The Russian has always pushed the Swiss hard, has taken a set in each
of their three previous contests, and almost knocked Federer out of the
US Open in 2008 in a three-and-a-half-hour five-setter. And Andreev
gave Federer another test this week, pushing him to a 7-5, 7-6 victory.

The history between Soderling and the German has a similar edge. In
four meetings, Kohlschreiber has won three, all in tie-breakers in the
deciding sets. Then in their last meeting, just a month ago in the
second round of Rotterdam, Kohlschreiber held match point for another
win, but this time it was Soderling who closed out the match in,
remarkably, another tie-breaker.

The difference seemed to come down to the evolution that Soderling has
shown in his match temperament. He stays calm, remains confident and so
finds it easier to close out the big points. In his current form,
therefore, Soderling was the strong favourite to get the upper hand
again.

Initially, it all went according the script and the Swede ran away to a
3-0 lead, but Kohlschreiber's nimble, varied, all-court game always
manages to undermine the powerful Soderling baseline game, and the
German closed the deficit to 3-3.

With another break of serve apiece, the two men headed to what has
become their commonplace scenario: a tiebreak. Again, Soderling took
the early advantage to lead 6-3 and held a further two set points
before Kohlschreiber served it out, 10-8.

Apart from the sweetest of backhands from the Kohlschreiber
single-hander firing winners to both sides of the court, it became
apparent that Soderling had another problem: The trainer was called to
massage the Swede's left foot and ankle. Soderling had already pulled
out of the doubles competition with illness and now it appeared that he
was also carrying an injury.

The Swede, though, is a fighter and it was a credit to him and the
growing strength of his game that he went through the second set on
near-equal terms. He did not looking comfortable, and had trouble
chasing down the assortment of ground-strokes and volleys thrown his
way by Kohlschreiber, yet he kept the score level until the middle of
the set.

His resistance could be put down in part to stunning first serve stats
for the set—81 percent to Kohlschreiber's poor 38 percent—but
Soderling's movement was too limited to hold off a style of tennis that
keeps him off balance even on a good day. At the first time of asking,
Kohlschreiber converted a single break point to win the match 6-4.

So the No4 seed joins Nos 5 and 6 in exiting from the top half of the
draw, leaving Rafael Nadal to continue his serene progress without the
prospect of a single seed in his path until the quarterfinals.

Once there, as seems likely from the dominant tennis he has produced in
his early rounds, the highest seed he can face is fellow Spaniard, No23
Albert Montanes, who beat No11 Nicolas Almagro.

Soderling's exit, hot on the heels of Murray's first-round loss, opened
up the other top-half quarter of the draw for the winner of what
promised to be an exciting confrontation between two of the most
talented 22-year-olds on the tour: Juan Martin Del Potro and Alexandr
Dolgopolov.

Both are in hot form: the Argentine has a 13-4 win-loss record this
year to the Ukrainian's 13-6, but there the similarity ends. Their
styles of play are like chalk and cheese: a bludgeon against a
scimitar, a power game against unconventional flair.

However, Dolgopolov could not string his best tennis together against
an Argentine who has begun to flower on the hot, hard courts of North
America, and it was a straight sets win to Del Potro.

The next round, though, could be rather more interesting, as Del Potro
attempts to break down the variety and tactics of Kohlschreiber where
Soderling could not.

There's a distance to go yet, but there remains on the horizon the
fascinating prospect of a Nadal vs Del Potro semi-final.

Nadal may have won when they last met at Indian Wells in 2009, but the
Argentine took his revenge in three further meetings that year: at the
Miami Masters, the Montreal Masters and, most memorable of all, the
semi-finals of the US Open. There is therefore much to whet the
appetite should they meet on the American hard courts again later this
week.
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