Advertisement

Raonic defeats Johnson, advances to Cincinnati quarter-finals

Milos Raonic serves against Robby Ginepri during a match on day 5 of the Western & Southern open at Linder Family Tennis Center on August 13, 2014 in Cincinnati, Ohio. Jonathan Moore/Getty Images

MASON, Ohio – Milos Raonic says he came to the court with a poor attitude, and it almost cost him. Fortunately for the fifth-seeded Canadian, his booming serve rescued him from a big upset.

Raonic saved a win with his 30th ace in a tense 6-7 (7), 6-3, 7-6 (4) victory over American qualifier Steve Johnson on Thursday to advance to the quarter-finals of the Western & Southern Open tennis tournament.

While his serve was potent, Raonic said his poor play made the contest “complicated.”

Raonic had to win it all in a tiebreaker after striking three double-faults as he served for victory leading 5-4 in the final set. In the end, the 23-year-old won the last four points of the tiebreaker, capping the victory with another ace.

“My attitude was not great when I was first serving for the match,” said Raonic. “It added up and made life a lot tougher, it put a lot of weight on my shoulders. I was playing too negatively.

Story continues below advertisement

“Johnson was getting ahead a few times, but not by any great distance. I just complicated things in a lot of moments. I certainly would have rather had that final ace at 5-4 in the third.”

Raonic plays on Friday against 15th seed Fabio Fognini, who beat Lu Yen-Hsun 3-6, 6-3, 6-3. He said that his downbeat demeanour that plagued his play Thursday is a temporary problem.

“It’s a Milos problem, we’ve spoken of it many times,” he said. “But the beauty of tennis is when you win, you can always play much better the next day.”

Raonic lost the opening set after 45 minutes. Johnson won it in a tiebreaker when the Raonic’s lob landed beyond the baseline.

In the second, Raonic began to turn the tide as he went up a break for 2-0 then levelled at a set each with a winner down the line on his second set point.

The third became hard work for Raonic due to his errors and tenacity from his American opponent. In the deciding tiebreaker, Raonic profited from Johnson’s forehand into the net to take a 6-4 and claimed the win on the next point.

Raonic, the last Canadian left in singles competition, will be playing his second Cincinnati quarter-final after 2012, when he lost to Stan Wawrinka.

Advertisement

Sponsored content

AdChoices