NEW YORK—Marin Cilic, seeded No. 14 at this U.S. Open, fired the second resounding salvo of this extraordinary semifinals day barely two hours after No. 10 seed Kei Nishikori eliminated world No. 1 Novak Djokovic. Showing a newfound poise but the same old howitzer serve, Cilic eliminated No. 2 seed Roger Federer to win a place opposite Nishikori in Monday night’s final.
Over the past few years, this lanky, 6’6” Croatian was saddled with a reputation for “over-thinking” the game. But today, Cilic didn’t need to do much thinking at all. He put on a formidable serving demonstration backed by precise groundstrokes. The final game of his one-hour and 45-minute, 6-3, 6-4, 6-4 masterpiece was an apt symbol of the kind of day he enjoyed.
With the pro-Federer crowd in Arthur Ashe Stadium palpably longing for their hero to break back to stay in the match at 4-5, Cilic stepped up to the line and fired a 129 M.P.H. ace. Then he took a little bit off as he went down the middle for another ace, this one just six M.P.H. slower. Next, in the deuce court, he applied a little spin but still managed to fire a 117 M.P.H. serve out wide—another ace.
At match point, Federer finally got stick on the serve, but Cilic calmly stepped in and swung his racquet, two-handed from the backhand side, like an Olympian throwing the hammer, and drilled a clean winner down the line.
Game, set, changing of the guard?