Greek-Australia Nick Kyrgios has powered into his first ATP
semi-final and tried to claim underdog status, despite sweeping Dutchman Robin
Haase aside 6-3 6-4 at the Estoril Open in Portugal.
The seventh-seeded Kyrgios, ranked 46th and playing only his
second event after returning from six weeks on the sidelines to rest an ankle
injury, will next play Pablo Carreno Busta, who beat eighth seed Gilles Muller
6-2 6-4, for a spot in the Sunday title match.
The only other remaining seed is be fifth seed Richard
Gasquet, who came from 2-5 down in the second set for a 6-1 7-6 (7-4) defeat of
Spaniard Nicolas Almagro and will face experienced Spanish campaigner Guillermo
Garcia-Lopez in his semi-final.
Kyrgios, who turned 20 at the start of the week, has played
quarter-finals at Wimbledon and at the Australian Open but has never been able
to connect on his big game at smaller ATP World Tour events.
"I felt very confident, I moved well and served well,
I'm very happy with my game right now," he said.
"I was solid and feel like I'm improving with each
match."
But Kyrgios warned: "I'm certainly not the favourite
against Pablo Carreno Busta. He grew up playing on clay and loves these
conditions. It will be very tough for me."
Kyrgios' victory over Haase, 28 and ranked 101, took just 56
minutes, as he fired seven aces and won three breaks.
The Greek-Australian, who nearly got defaulted in his opening
match for the offence of firing a ball in anger out of the small club stadium,
kept his nerves in check in his latest victory.
Kyrgios quickly bounced back from an early break to level at
2-2 in the first set, then broke for 4-2 and closed out the set in less than
half an hour.
In the second, he broke midway through and eventually
finished up the winner on his first match point.
Meanwhile, Gasquet was pleased to get past Almagro, one of
seven active players with 200 claycourt career wins.
"It's always a battle with him," he said.
"He's physically strong and doesn't miss much. He is
one of the best on clay.
"I've said all week it's too early to speak of the
final, I have another tough match to play. We will see what will happen.
"My back has been improving all week and I'm serving
and playing with more confidence."
Earlier, Croatian young gun Borna Coric fell to a comeback
from Garcia-Lopez, the 31-year-old winner of last weekend's Bucharest title.
Coric lost 6-3 7-6 (7-4) after Garcia-Lopez battled back
from 5-1 down in the second set after winning the first.
The Spaniard has now won his last eight matches on clay.
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