Youzhny wears down Wawrinka, into semi-finals

NEW YORK, (Reuters) – Mikhail Youzhny of Russia wore down marathon man Stanislas Wawrinka of Switzerland in five  sets yesterday and advanced to the U.S. Open semi-finals. 
 
The 12th-seeded Russian trailed two sets to one before coming back to claim a 3-6 7-6 3-6 6-3 6-3 victory in a  gruelling groundstroke battle on another cool, blustery day on  Arthur Ashe centre court.  

“It was tough conditions,” Youzhny told reporters.
“You  understand you can beat him and he can beat you. I just tried  to play every point.” 

Wawrinka, seeded 25th, was coming off a five-set win over  20th-seeded American Sam Querrey in the fourth round following  a nearly four-hour long upset of British fourth seed Andy  Murray and in the end could not keep pace. 
 
Youzhny, who also reached the semi-finals at the 2006 U.S.  Open, will play the winner of the quarter-final between  top-seed Rafa Nadal and fellow Spaniard Fernando Verdasco.  

Wawrinka, who had spent the longest time on court among the  quarter-finalists at 12 hours 27 minutes, looked like he was  running out of steam, struggling with his movement and wearing  a bandage on his left knee and a wrapping on his right thigh. 
 
After dropping the fourth set and having his serve broken  in the opening game of the final set he was on the ropes. 
 
The game Swiss, playing his first grand slam quarter-final,  made one last surge, breaking back to level it 2-2, reaching  double break point after winning a stinging exchange of volleys  at the net.
  
At that point, Youzhny, 28, called out the trainer to  retape a toe on his right foot and when play resumed he quickly  broke right back as Wawrinka double-faulted and then struck a  backhand wide on break point.