SYDNEY: Daniil Medvedev continued to baffle his opponents at the ATP Cup yesterday, securing a hard-fought and fiery victory against Argentina’s Diego Schwartzman and propelling Russia into the semi-finals of the inaugural team event.
Medvedev, ranked five in the world and undefeated in singles this tournament, won 6-4 4-6 6-3 in Sydney and will lead Russia against the winner of Novak Djokovic-led Serbia or Canada.
Earlier, Russia’s Karen Khachanov defeated an out-of-sorts Guido Pella from Argentina 6-2 7-6(4), with the victories giving Russia an unassailable 2-0 lead in the quarter-final tie ahead of the doubles match.
The decisive victory contrasted with the knife-edge contest in the day’s other quarter-final between Australia and Britain.
Australia’s untested doubles pairing of Alex De Minaur and Nick Kyrgios saved four match points against Britain’s Jamie Murray and Joe Salisbury before clinching a spot in the semi-finals in a half hour-long extended tiebreak –used in place of a deciding third set.
With Russian team captain Marat Safin sitting in his corner, Medvedev broke his opponent’s serve twice – and gave one break back – in an entertaining first set, where his slapping forehand ebbed between sublime and out-of-control.
World number 13 Schwartzman got better as the match progressed, attacking relentlessly.
The pair exchanged heated words at one point, earning Team Russia a warning, before Medvedev received a point penalty after waving his racquet at the umpire and hitting the umpire’s chair shortly after losing a service game in the second set.
Exchange
Medvedev said after the match he had been frustrated with how his opponent reacted to a stroke of luck during the match, which prompted his exchange with Schwartzman and, later, the umpire.
Medvedev said he deserved the reprimand from the umpire and that while he expected to be fined by the tour, he did not anticipate further disciplinary action.
“Nothing happened to the chair, nothing happened to anybody, I didn’t break my racquet,” he said.
The crowd turned against Medvedev after the incident, and the Russian looked ready to implode, though it proved to be only a partial flare-up.
Schwartzman won the second set but Medvedev recovered to take the decider, with the 1.98m (6-feet-6-inch) Russian increasingly relying on his booming serve to get himself out of trouble when tested.
In the day session, De Minaur and Kyrgios defeated doubles specialists Murray and Salisbury 3-6 6-3 18-16 to set up a semi-final against either Rafael Nadal-led Spain or David Goffin’s Belgium.