Top seed Daniil Medvedev has fended off a late-match surge from James Duckworth and punched his ticket to the National Bank Open Presented by Rogers quarter-finals on Thursday.
Quick out of the blocks in attack and a brick wall in defence, the 25-year-old gave the Australian few chances at making any real inroads until the closing stages as he clinched the pair’s first ATP Head2Head encounter 6-2, 6-4.
A runner-up at the event in Montreal two years ago, the Russian continued his affinity for North American hard courts to reach his eighth ATP Masters 1000 quarter-final. He awaits the winner of his Wimbledon conqueror – seventh seed Hubert Hurkacz – or Georgian Nikoloz Basilashvili.
Duckworth was enjoying an equal career-best run at an ATP Masters 1000 event, having won through two rounds of qualifying before posting impressive straight-sets wins over Taylor Fritz and last week’s Citi Open champion Jannik Sinner. But a first victory over a Top 10 opponent in nine attempts proved a bridge too far against Medvedev.
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“He was playing good, especially in the beginning. I managed to get a few tight games, managed to get ahead. I think he lost his rhythm a little bit so that was well my fault also,” Medvedev said. “I managed to be ahead throughout the rest of the match and then – it’s very normal, it’s the same for everybody when your back’s against the wall – I served for the match, he played much better than before.
“He managed to be the closer and well played from him because it’s putting pressure on your opponent. I managed to keep this pressure out there and really happy with the win.”
Having undergone eight surgeries throughout his career, Duckworth left with much to celebrate in what was shaping as his finest season. For his feats this week, he was projected to crack the Top 70 for the first time.
The World No. 2’s only wobble came as he served for the match at 5-2. Duckworth elevated his game to summon his first break point and he and converted it to extend his stay before Medvedev closed it out at the second time of asking.
“When you face someone for the first time it’s a bit tougher and we’d never practised together so I didn’t know what to expect,” Medvedev said. “Sometimes you just need to find things during the match. Even when you play someone for the 10th time every day is different so it’s always about finding the right spot during the match.”
from Tennis - ATP World Tour https://ift.tt/3ADtrxv
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