“It's been an amazing year. I'm playing my best tennis since a few years now so hopefully I can keep this level,” Wawrinka said.
Stan Wawrinka edged out Cypriot Marcos Baghdatis in a nerve-jangling, near-30 minute tiebreak to secure the Dubai Duty Free Championship with a 6-4 7-6(13) triumph on Saturday.
Wawrinka’s path to victory had been eased by the retirements of world number one Novak Djokovic and Australian prospect Nick Kyrgios in the earlier rounds but the Swiss often toiled against surprise finalist Baghdatis, whom he beat for a sixth successive time.
World
number four Wawrinka was gifted the first set by a Baghdatis double
fault -- his third of that game alone -- and a tepid second set was
notable for not featuring a single break point.
But
then followed a 28-point tiebreak in which twice grand slam champion
Wawrinka saved five set points before a Baghdatis backhand drifted long
to give the Swiss a second title of the year following his victory in
Chennai in January.
“It's been an amazing year. I'm playing my best tennis since a few years now so hopefully I can keep this level,” Wawrinka said.
Baghdatis
initially played serve and volley with aplomb, while Wawrinka's
stinging backhand was lethal from the baseline, but that early assurance
proved fleeting as both players made a catalogue of errors.
Wawrinka
afforded Baghdatis two break points after whipping a forehand wide and
the Cypriot converted following another wayward Swiss forehand for a 3-2
first-set lead.
Wawrinka, who was within two
points of suffering opening-round elimination at the Aviation Club,
immediately broke back with a crosscourt winner past the advancing
Baghdatis, who was seeking a first title since 2010.
The pair were content to trade half-paced shots from the back of the court and when either did up the tempo it usually failed.
World number 57 Baghdatis, serving at 4-5, saved four set points but his serve deserted him again as he conceded the set.
The
second set went with serve before an attritional tiebreak in which
Baghdatis fluffed chances to square the match and Wawrinka threw his
racket in frustration after missing an easy forehand.
“It
was a crazy tiebreak," added Wawrinka. "Until 6-6 I was always up with a
mini break ... I did two or three quick mistakes. Then it starts to be
all about nerves. You try to play simple, aggressive and it was good to
finish in two sets."
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