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Murray advances, Safin upset in St.
Petersburg
Defending
champion Andy Murray beat
Ernests Gulbis 6-4, 6-2 yesterday to advance to the quarterfinals of
the St. Petersburg Open, while eighth-seeded Marat Safin was upset
in the second round. Andrey Golubev of Kazakhstan beat Safin 6-4,
6-2 to advance to his first career quarter-final.
Murray, fresh
from winning the Madrid Masters on Sunday for his fourth title this
season, won his first three games at love before saving a break
point in the next game that he served.
The fourth-ranked
Briton broke Gulbis in the eighth game for a 5-3 lead, but the
Latvian broke back in the next game. Murray immediately broke again
to take the set, and won four consecutive games in the second set to
close out the match.
“He (Gulbis) is
very unpredictable in his game style,” Murray said. “He had a couple
of good shots to break me, but I broke him in the next game, so it
wasn’t a problem.”
It was the ninth
consecutive win for the U.S. Open finalist, including two victories
in Britain’s Davis Cup World Group playoffs against Austria in
September. Murray’s win-loss record this season is 50-14, making him
the fifth player this year to win 50 matches.
“I’m going to try
my best to win the tournament,” Murray said. “When you keep winning,
it gives you a lot of confidence.” Murray, who also won titles in
Doha, Marseille and Cincinnati, plays his 10th quarterfinal this
season against Janko Tipsarevic.
The Serb advanced
to his fourth quarterfinal this season, beating Jeremy Chardy of
France 6-4, 7-6 (3). Safin, the 31st-ranked Russian who has twice
won the tournament, had trouble on his serve, winning only 15 of 51
returned points.
The 150th-ranked
Golubev, who reached the second round of the U.S. Open in September,
broke Safin in the fifth game of the first set but double-faulted
three times in the next game to drop serve and stay level at 3-3.
In the ninth
game, Safin saved three break points with aces but was broken on the
third deuce, and Golubev served for the set. “The second break in
the first set was a decisive one,” Safin said. “He became confident
and it was much more difficult to play against him. In fact, I
didn’t have many chances in the second set.”
Golubev won five
consecutive games for a 5-1 lead in the second set. “I knew he would
be playing his best tennis today,” Safin said. “He had nothing to
lose and played with no problems. No matter how I tried, it was his
day today.”
Golubev said his
loss to David Nalbandian in the U.S. Open second round gave him
experience on how to play top-ranked players. Victor Hanescu
of Romania beat Kazakh qualifier Mikhail Kukushkin 6-3, 7-6 (7).
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