Andy Murray beats David Ferrer to reach French Open semis

British number one is unbeaten on clay in 2015 and will face Djokovic in last four

Andy Murray continued his outstanding run on clay with a 7-6, 6-2, 5-7, 6-1 win over David Ferrer on Wednesday to book a place in the semi-finals of the French Open for the third time in his career.

He saved two set points in a topsy-turvy opener, which contained six breaks of serve, before pulling away in the second and having missed a match point in the third, rebounded superbly in the fourth to record a 15th straight victory and set up a clash with the world No1 Novak Djokovic.

Having never beaten Ferrer in four previous outings on the surface, Murray, 28, wore down the 30-year-old with some consistent hitting and a barrage of winners, 53 in all.

Moving beautifully, he maintained his unbeaten run on clay this year, a spell that has taken him to his first ever clay-court title in Munich and then a second in Madrid. He is the first British man ever to reach the last four here on three or more occasions, which says an awful lot about his ability on what is supposed to be his worst surface.

READ MORE

On Court Suzanne Lenglen, which was bathed in warm sunshine for the first three sets, Murray set about running off the legs of the ever-dogged Ferrer, a finalist here in 2013. Both men were aggressive on returns and Murray broke in the opening game, only to be broken straight back.

Having swapped breaks again, Murray earned a third break for 4-3 and served for the set at 5-4, only to falter. Ferrer then stepped up his game to lead 6-5 and had two set points only for Murray to hold firm, before moving up another gear in a tiebreak which he took 7-4.

The second set hinged on the third game when Murray held from 0-40 with five brilliant points and that seemed to take the wind out of Ferrer, who was having problems with his ball toss and was promptly broken in the next game. Always looking to be aggressive, Murray then broke again to take the set 6-2.

At 3-0 in the third, the match looked over but Ferrer hit back to level only for Murray to gather himself and at 5-4, he had a match point, which Ferrer saved. When the Spaniard then broke to win the set 7-5, an epic seemed possible but Murray gathered himself and promptly stormed through the fourth to advance to the last four.

(Guardian service)