NEW YORK—At 5-3 in the fifth set against David Ferrer on Wednesday, Richard Gasquet gathered the balls from the ball kids, shot a quick look up at his player’s box, and stepped to the baseline to serve for a spot in the U.S. Open semifinals. Then the Frenchman did something that he hadn’t done all match: He hit a backhand—that famous, flowing, formidable one-handed backhand—and he grunted.
Gasquet has never been a member of the grunting school; he’s a man of art rather than grit. Now, though, with the match on the line, it was as if he felt the need to take a page from the man across the net from him. Ferrer is definitely of the grunting school; he's a man of grit rather than art. Whatever he had been doing against Gasquet, it had been working. Ferrer had won eight of their nine meetings before today, including the last five. This time, though, things would turn out differently.
Whether the grunt helped or not, Gasquet’s backhand at 5-3 had a little extra oomph on it. He went for the percentage play, the cross-court, rather than his favorite showboat shot, the down-the-line missile. The ball skidded past Ferrer for a winner. A couple of minutes later, after a few last anxious deep breaths, a few last looks up at his box, Gasquet whistled a final forehand in the other direction. It went for a winner, too. The man of art had survived a five-set war with the man of grit, and made his first Grand Slam semifinal in six years.
“I knew I was so close to win this match,” Gasquet said later. “Especially at 5-3 I was a little bit nervous to go into the semis of the U.S. Open, and I managed to do it.”
He was so nervous that, when Ferrer challenged a call in the final game, Gasquet looked up to the sky and said a prayer that Hawk-Eye wouldn’t betray him. For once, the fates were working with, rather than against, the much-maligned Reeshard. Hawk-Eye confirmed that Ferrer's shot had been out.
Earlier this week the world had been stunned when Roger Federer lost, in the words of one U.S. sportswriter, “to some dude named Tommy Robredo.” But for anyone who follows tennis closely, the sight of Gasquet winning the first two sets against Ferrer, losing the next two, and righting himself in time to win the fifth was nearly as big a surprise. This is a player who has made something of a specialty of losing from two sets up over the years. He did it against Andy Murray twice, once at Roland Garros and once at Wimbledon; and he did it again in Paris this spring, going out to Stan Wawrinka in an epic heartbreaker. Gasquet is one of the few men with the dubious distinction of having lost two five-setters over the course of one Davis Dup weekend, against Russia in 2006.
“It’s true I lost sometimes [in fifth sets],” Gasquet admitted when he was asked about his record today. But rather than making him more fearful, he said it served as motivation. “I really wanted to close out this match to win, because it’s Ferrer, center court in the U.S. Open.”
It was also a big win because it came over an opponent whose career has been everything that Gasquet's hasn’t. For example: