Japan Open: Paire stuns Nishikori to meet Wawrinka in final

Paire, playing in a pair of badly torn sneakers following a forlorn dash to buy some new ones, won a nail-biter 1-6, 6-4, 6-2 to prove his first-round win over Nishikori at the US Open six weeks ago was no fluke. Top seed Stan Wawrinka awaits his close friend in Sunday's Tokyo final after the French Open champion produced a clinical 6-4, 7-6 win over Luxembourg's Gilles Muller.

Published : Oct 10, 2015 16:24 IST , Tokyo

Benoit Paire came back from one set down to win the match 1-6, 6-4, 6-2 against Kei Nishikori.
Benoit Paire came back from one set down to win the match 1-6, 6-4, 6-2 against Kei Nishikori.
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Benoit Paire came back from one set down to win the match 1-6, 6-4, 6-2 against Kei Nishikori.

Lightning struck twice for Kei Nishikori as the defending Japan Open champion was ambushed by “shoeless” Frenchman Benoit Paire in an explosive semi-final on Saturday.

Paire, playing in a pair of badly torn sneakers following a forlorn dash to buy some new ones, won a nail-biter 1-6, 6-4, 6-2 to prove his first-round win over Nishikori at the US Open six weeks ago was no fluke.

Top seed Stan Wawrinka awaits his close friend in Sunday's Tokyo final after the French Open champion produced a clinical 6-4, 7-6 win over Luxembourg's Gilles Muller.

Nishikori's bid for a third Japan Open crown in four years came to a shuddering halt as Paire roared back from dropping a whirlwind first set in just 20 minutes.

“One minute he was missing, the next he wasn't,” shrugged Nishikori, at a loss to explain his collapse. “I started well but when he lifted his game, I didn't seem to be able to cope.”

His tattered shoes held together with medical tape and with only one spare racquet in his kit bag, Paire levelled the match by ripping a backhand down the line, celebrating with a gunslinger's pose as the crowd fell silent.

The bearded Frenchman broke early in the decider and the world number 32 fought off a late salvo from Nishikori to complete the coup de grace after one hour and 48 minutes with a massive forehand into the corner.

“He suddenly started hitting some great shots,” conceded Nishikori. “You have to give him credit for the quality of his play. He's a very difficult opponent.”

In contrast, Wawrinka never looked troubled in his semi-final, taking the opening set with little fuss in chilly conditions, a booming serve giving the muscular Swiss the advantage.

Twice Muller double-faulted to gift Wawrinka a break in the second, only for the world number four to immediately surrender his own serve.

But Wawrinka, chasing a fourth title of the year and the 11th of his career, knuckled down in the tiebreaker and closed out proceedings with a crunching forehand return which Muller could only volley wide.

“Benoit is a great player and a fun player to watch,” said Wawrinka, looking ahead to the final. “He is crazy in his game and can play shots nobody else can play. The important thing is that I'm in the final. The one who is more aggressive and puts all his game on court will win.”

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