Nishikori Outlasts Raonic In Epic Five Set Match

September 2, 2014 | By New York Tennis Magazine Staff
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Japan’s Kei Nishikori earned a quarterfinal spot in the US Open on Monday night, knocking off fifth-seeded Canadian Milos Raonic 4-6, 7-6(4), 6-7(8), 7-5, 6-4 in an epic five-set bout that didn’t end until just before 2:30 a.m. on Tuesday morning.

The 10th seed, Nishikori needed four hours and 19 minutes to upend the big-serving Canadian who ripped 35 aces in five sets.  Nishikori used an effective return game to fend off some of Raonic’s serves, with the fastest coming at 144 miles per hour, and dominated with his own serve in the final two sets to pull off the upset.

“Tried to fight every point, and when I have to play well, I did,” said Nishikori. “It was tough to concentrate all the time against Milos. He has a great serve, lots of aces.”

As the 24-year old from began to neutralize the Canadian’s serve as the match went on, his serve became more effective. He did not surrender a break point chance in the final two frames, and in contrast, notched two key break points of his own to turn the tables in the match.

Coming into the tournament, Nishikori had not played since a quarterfinal loss to Richard Gasquet in the Citi Open quarterfinals. An injured big toe forced him out of action for the last three weeks, and he says now that his foot is starting to feel healthy.

“I was doing a lot of training, but not tennis-wise. I start(ed) playing points a couple days ago before the tournament,” said Nishikori. “I wasn’t expecting big result like this, but after the first round I get more confidence in my foot. It’s all good now.”

Nishikori is the first Japanese player into the US Open quarterfinals since Zenzo Shimidzu in 1922. He will take on Swiss Stan Wawrinka after the Australian Open champion took out Spaniard Tommy Robredo earlier in the day.

The 2:26 a.m. finish ties a record for the latest ending to a US Open match. Phillip Kohlschreiber over John Isner in 2012 and Mats Wilander’s win over Mikael Pernfors in 1993 both ended at 2:26 a.m. also.


New York Tennis Magazine Staff
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