Confident Federer too strong for Mathieu

NEW YORK, (Reuters) – Five-times champion Roger  Federer dismissed Paul-Henri Mathieu of France 6-4 6-3 6-3 yesterday to reach the fourth round of the U.S. Open.  

The Swiss number two seed had more trouble from the gusting  winds at Flushing Meadows than he did with the game of Mathieu  as he ran out a comfortable winner. 
 
“I thought I played great today in the wind,” Federer said  in a courtside interview. “I think he had break point at 4-3  but once I was able to save it and break him, I think it broke  his will maybe.”“  

With gusting winds blowing across the court, both players  were more watchful than normal but Federer’s consistency and a  good serving day, with 13 aces, saw him through.
  
Mathieu’s only chance came when he forced a break point in  the eighth game but Federer saved it with a service winner and  after holding, broke the Frenchman’s serve and served it out.  

Federer broke twice to win the second set and then in the  sixth game of the third and though he fell behind 40-0 when  serving for the match at 5-3, he held on to clinch victory in  one hour 39 minutes. 
 
Federer, whose winning streak in New York was ended in the  final last year by Argentina’s Juan Martin Del Potro, will now  play either 13th seed Jurgen Melzer of Austria or Juan Carlos  Ferrero, the 22nd seed from Spain.  

“I came through the juniors with both of those guys,”  Federer said. “I will have my hands full. Regardless who comes  through I know it’s going to be a tough match.”