Roger Federer skidded and fell to the ground before recovering to beat Lleyton Hewitt 4-6, 6-3, 7-5, 6-4 yesterday and extend his US Open winning streak to 37 matches by reaching the fourth round.
Federer was serving, ahead 4-2 and 40-love in the first set, when he proceeded to spray shots all over Arthur Ashe Court, losing five straight points on the way towards dropping the first set. He committed 23 unforced errors in the first.
"I just had to believe that I could still turn this around," Federer said. "And with the great streak I have against him, I knew that if I could get back into the match then I could get back on a roll, because I've done it so many times against him."
Even when he looked to be cruising to the victory in the closing set, up 5-2 and getting ready to serve out the match, he got broken. All that did was extend the match a few more minutes, though it did nothing to quash the notion that Federer was not on top of his game on this day.
"You know how good he can play when he's on and you try to take advantage of those small opportunities when they come," Hewitt said. "You're not going to get a lot, obviously."
Hewitt, who has lost 14 straight to the top-ranked Swiss player, is one of the few out there who knows what it's like to beat Federer - regularly.
He won eight of the first 10 meetings in this series, but that was years ago, before Federer started winning Grand Slam tournaments with regularity, and before Hewitt started enduring hip problems that dropped him out of the top 100 before his more recent resurgence.
Federer is trying to become the first player to win six straight titles in New York since Bill Tilden in the 1920s.
His next match will come against either James Blake of the United States or Tommy Robredo of Spain.
In other matches yesterday, 15th-seeded Radek Stepanek defeated 23rd-seeded Philipp Kohlschreiber, eighth-seeded Nikolay Davydenko defeated Marco Chiudinelli and No. 4 Novak Djokovic ended American qualifier Jesse Witten's run to push the top 16 seeded players to 36-0 in the tournament. This is the first time in the 41-year history of the Open era that all top-16 men have advanced to the third round of a Grand Slam.
In women's play, 13th-seeded Nadia Petrova of Russia beat 21st-seeded Zheng Jie of China 6-4, 6-1.