Roger Federer stunned by Russian qualifier in Cincinnati Masters
Roger Federer was smashed in straight sets by the world number 70 in an early exit from a tournament he’s won seven times.
A fearless Andrey Rublev outfoxed Roger Federer 6-3 6-4 in the third round of the Cincinnati Masters.
The Russian qualifier broke the third-seeded Swiss in his first two service games and won 81 per cent of his first serve points to wrap up the upset in just over an hour.
According to the ATP, the 62-minute defeat was Federer’s quickest on record since he lost in 54 minutes to Franco Squillari in Sydney in 2003.
Federer looked very flat and uninterested but... what a performance from Rublev. Flawless.
— José Morgado (@josemorgado) August 15, 2019
Fantastic moment for a young talented who suffered so much with injuries already.
Yesterday after he beat Stan Wawrinka I asked Andrey Rublev about playing Roger Federer. "Easy draw, huh?" He quipped.
— Nick McCarvel (@NickMcCarvel) August 15, 2019
Beats Rog in straight sets. 1st career Masters 1000 QF #CincyTennis
Rublev, 21, shed tears of joy after pulling off the biggest win of his career.
“It is such an amazing feeling when you’re playing a legend like Roger and all these people supporting him until the end,” he told ESPN in an on-court interview.
“One day I hope I’m going to feel the same.
“Today I was just trying to do my best and was thinking in my head that I need to play every point until the end no matter what.”
The win sets up an all Russian quarter-final with ninth seed Daniil Medvedev.
Federer has won the tournament more than anyone, using it as a springboard to the US Open.
He had 16 unforced errors against the 70th-ranked Rublev, who raised both fists and wiped a teary eye in celebration after Federer’s forehand sailed long to end it.
Struggling with his serve, Federer got broken twice in the first set. “And there you have it. It set the tone for the match a little bit,” Federer said.
“He was super clean — offence, defence, serving well. He didn’t give me anything.”
But Federer, who lost a classic five-set match for the Wimbledon title to Novak Djokovic, still thinks he’s in good shape heading into the US Open despite the upset in Cincinnati.
Roger Federer: âIâm happy I came here. Hoped it would have gone better.â @CincyTennis @fox19 pic.twitter.com/ddokT9zZ3S
— Jeremy Rauch (@FOX19Jeremy) August 15, 2019