Estoril Open 2004 News and Events

Marat Safin
© João Lagos Sports
Russia's Marat Safin moved through to the semifinals of the
Estoril Open for the first time after defeating No. 4 seed
Tommy Robredo in a three-set thriller at the Estadio Nacional.
Safin, the No. 8 seed who reached the quarterfinals in 2002,
came through 7-6(2), 2-6, 7-6(5) in 2 hours, 27 minutes to
record his fourth win against Robredo in six career meetings.
"It's really good to be in the semifinals, and it's really
good for my confidence," said Safin. "It was really
difficult in the conditions and difficult for both of us to
show our best tennis. We were both fighting against each other
and fighting against ourselves. Neither of us wanted to lose,
and I think that given the conditions, we played good tennis."
The 24-year-old from Moscow, who reached the final at the
Australian Open earlier this year, overcame the windy conditions
to book a place in the last four against Irakli Labadze.
Despite three double faults in his opening service game, Safin
eventually held and broke Robredo to love to lead 2-0 in the
opening set. But the Spaniard hit back immediately and broke
Safin again in the ninth game to serve for the set only to
see his chance slip away as the Russian broke back and eventually
took the opener in the tie-break.
Robredo soon put the disappointment behind him and ran away
with the second set in just over half an hour, breaking Safin's
serve three times to force a decider.
Both players traded breaks early in the final set, which then
went comfortably with serve until the tie-break. At 5-5, Safin
attacked the net with some purpose to produce a match point,
and Robredo duly handed him a place in the semifinals with
his fourth double fault of the match.
"In the second set, I had my chance in the first game
[at 15-30] and the match would have been basically over,"
said Safin. "But I missed it and he felt he could come
back into the match. Sometimes I went for too much and wanted
to win in two sets, and before I knew it, the second set was
gone. So I really wanted to keep my concentration in the third
set."
Looking ahead to his match with good friend Labadze, Safin
added: "We have known each other since we were nine years
old and we have played together in Russia. We played in the
Under 16 European championships and he beat me in the quarterfinals.
He's one of my best friends and I really like him. It will
be nice for me to play him in the semis and hopefully get
revenge."


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