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Friday, January 09, 2009
Sat Nov 15 10:14:15 2008 Comment | Email | Print

Davydenko rolls Murray; Djokovic next in Masters Cup final


Shanghai, China (Sports Network) - Andy Murray's sky-high ride to the lucrative Tennis Masters Cup semifinals came to an abrupt end Saturday, as Nikolay Davydenko closed strong in both sets to reach the final at the $4.45 million season-ending tournament.

Murray, coming off a dramatic and emotional three-set victory over Roger Federer on Friday, started on solid footing in both sets, but couldn't withstand a fierce Davydenko barrage late. The Russian downed Scotland's young star, 7-5, 6-2.

The round-robin format brought plenty of casualties to the courts in Shanghai, leaving Murray the only player unscathed entering Saturday's semifinals. Murray went 3-0 to win the Red Group, while Davydenko finished 2-1 in the Gold Group, with a loss earlier in the week to Serbian Novak Djokovic, who will be his opponent in Sunday's final.

The Australian Open champion Djokovic rallied to down Frenchman Gilles Simon, 4-6, 6-3, 7-5 in Saturday's other semifinal. Simon finished 2-1 in Red Group play, and like Murray, defeated Federer at the beginning of red-round play.

Federer's stunning exit still permeated the event on Saturday. It was the first time the Swiss superstar hadn't reached the semifinals at the season- ending event in seven tries.

Murray was to thank for that, yet the Scot's fortunes changed on Saturday. Davydenko used a powerful first serve and broke through on 2-of-8 break chances to steal the opening set. Murray was below 50 percent on his first serve and had just one break opportunity in the first set.

The second set was a tidal wave of Davydenko forehands and flawless play. He was a perfect 8-for-8 on first-serve point opportunities and didn't face a break over his four service games.

Djokovic's trip to the finals was slightly more arduous in a match that extended to nearly three hours. Simon was nearly unbeatable with his first serve in the opening set, winning 13-of-14 first serve points. He won just 1- of-6 break chances, but it was good enough to take the set.

The second set was a complete 360-degree turn, as Djokovic had all of the break opportunities, and like Simon, he converted on just one. However, also like the Frenchman, the one break was good enough to force a third and deciding set.

Three double faults from Simon in the third set weighed heavily on his service games, and Djokovic took two breaks to slip into the winner's circle.

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