PARIS, (Reuters) – Richard Gasquet kept his ATP World Tour finals hopes alive when he overcame Fernando Verdasco 7-5 6-7(6) 6-3 to reach the Paris Masters third round as fellow Frenchman Jo-Wilfried Tsonga crashed out of the race yesterday.
Ninth seed Gasquet, enjoying his best season since he reached the last four at Wimbledon and a career-high world number seven spot in 2007, looks set to grab one of the three remaining tickets to next week’s season-ending London event.
For a place in the last eight, Gasquet will take on Japanese Kei Nishikori, who ended local favourite Tsonga’s hopes by prevailing 1-6 7-6(4) 7-6(7) after saving two match points.
Gasquet has been nursing a thigh pain as the end of a long season looms.
“It hurts sometimes, but it’s not very serious. I played two hours and 45 minutes today, and I saw that I could play, although I was not at 100 percent,” the world number 10 told a news conference.
“It was tough to play a long match like this.”
Gasquet, who reached the U.S. Open semi-finals in September, refuses to put pressure on himself.
“I had a good season. I’m very happy with what I did. I will not have a lot of pressure for this match. It’s sort of a gift for me to be here,” he said.
The Frenchman did not exactly shine in front of his home crowd, looking far from his attacking self in a two-hour, 41-minute tussle and allowing Verdasco to put him on the back foot too often.
The Spaniard, who had won six of their last seven encounters, saved 14 of 18 break points but eventually Gasquet’s superb single-handed backhand made the difference.
Gasquet wrapped it up on his fifth match point when Verdasco, an Australian Open semi-finalist in 2009, returned long.
Five players – Rafa Nadal, Novak Djokovic, David Ferrer, Juan Martin del Potro and Tomas Berdych – have already secured their places at the ATP World Tour finals.
Britain’s Andy Murray, third in the ATP Race to London, has withdrawn because he is still recovering from back surgery, meaning the ninth-ranked player will qualify for the O2 event.
Swiss Roger Federer, who is seventh in the Race, will qualify if he wins his first match at Bercy after a bye into the second round.
His compatriot Stanislas Wawrinka and Gasquet started the week in eighth and ninth respectively.
Tsonga, who now cannot improve on his 10th place, got off to a canon start against Nishikori, punishing him with his booming forehand.
He lost focus inexplicably in the second set, falling 4-1 behind and although he managed to force a tiebreak, a string of unforced errors threw the match into a decider, which Nishikori won as his opponent double-faulted on match point.
Later yesterday, world number two Djokovic was due to start his Paris campaign with a second-round match against French qualifier Pierre-Hugues Herbert.