Roger Federer beats Lorenzo Sonego to advance to 18th Wimbledon Singles Quarter-Final | Launderer report



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AP Photo / Kirsty Wigglesworth

After surviving an early test in the first set, Roger Federer found his rhythm in a 7-5, 6-4, 6-2 win over Lorenzo Sonego to reach the quarter-finals of the 2021 Wimbledon men’s tournament.

Wimbledon @Wimbledon

Straight sets, straight in his 18th #Wimbledon quarterfinal… @Roger Federer beats Lorenzo Sonego 7-5, 6-4, 6-2 to reach the last eight on center court pic.twitter.com/G8VDVyR0XX

Federer made history as the oldest male player to reach a Grand Slam quarter-final in 44 years.

With the first set tied at 5-5, the weather kicked in to provide both players with a brief rain delay and let the retractable roof over center court close.

Sonego seemed poised to take control at the time of the delay. The 26-year-old Italian was leading 40-15 at some point in Game 11 before play was suspended.

After the delay, Federer was able to pull himself together and take control of the game. Sonego made several mental mistakes during the first set that cost him dearly.

Federer was also not at his best in the first set. The eight-time Wimbledon champion committed 17 unforced errors, against nine for Sonego.

Once he finished the first set in just over an hour of the game, Federer started to look more at ease. It took him 44 minutes to complete the second set.

The stats for Federer’s 6-4 second set victory were much more in line with what fans are used to seeing from him. The 39-year-old won 12 of his 15 first serve points and 11 of 15 net points by committing four unforced errors.

The third set was largely the same from Federer. He had as many aces in the third as he had in the first two sets combined (two) and won two of his four break point chances.

Federer has been careful to watch his playing time at this point in his career. The native of Switzerland took of of Roland-Garros after a victory in the third round because “it’s important that I listen to my body” after two knee surgeries.

The decision came after Federer played a four-set match against Dominik Koepfer that lasted 3.5 hours.

After Monday’s opening set took 61 minutes, Federer looked like he could have a long day that would test his physical resolve. Instead, he only needed 70 minutes in total to win his next two sets.

Federer’s next player will be the winner of the Daniil Medvedev-Hubert Hurkacz match.



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