INDIAN WELLS: Roger Federer continued his red-hot run by dispatching surprise finalist John Isner 7-6 6-3 to become the first player to win the Indian Wells ATP tournament four times.
The Swiss world number three blunted the powerful serving of Isner with a controlled display, edging the American 9-7 in the first set tiebreak then breaking him twice in the second set to triumph in one hour and 21 minutes.
Federer clinched the title when the towering Isner, who upset world number one Novak Djokovic in the semi-finals and will rise to a career-high 10th in the rankings today, dumped a forehand into the net.
The Swiss, who had won three consecutive titles at Indian Wells from 2004-06, raised both arms skywards in celebration as the capacity crowd at the Indian Wells Tennis Garden erupted in applause.
On a cool afternoon in the California desert, the opening set went with serve until the 12th game when Federer, leading 6-5, had a chance to break Isner when the American hit a forehand long to go advantage down.
However the 6ft-9in (2.05m) Isner saved that with a 129 mph (207 km/h) serve to force a Federer error and the set went into a tiebreak where the Swiss squandered further set points when leading 6-5 and 7-6.
Federer, beaten by Isner in four sets in a Davis Cup first round tie last month, finally clinched the set on his fourth opportunity when his opponent’s backhand service return sailed long.
He broke Isner in the seventh game of the second, unleashing a trademark backhand pass down the line to go 15-40 up before winning the next point when the American netted a backhand volley as he charged forward.
After holding serve to lead 5-3, Federer broke Isner for a second time to end the match, improving his record for the year to 22-2 and surpassing Jimmy Connors and Michael Chang who were both three-times champions at Indian Wells.
Since his semi-final loss to Djokovic at last year’s US Open, the 16-times grand slam champion has been arguably the hottest player on the men’s circuit, winning 39 of his 41 matches.
Meanwhile, World number one Victoria Azarenka clinched her fourth title of the year with a 6-2, 6-3 demolition of an error-prone Maria Sharapova in the final of the Indian Wells WTA tournament on Sunday.
On a cold and blustery day, the Belarusian broke Sharapova’s serve twice in the opening set and four times in the second to seal a commanding victory in one hour, 26 minutes on the showpiece stadium court. (Agencies)