Yet even in that moment, Federer still felt some hope. "I had belief I could turn it around, even then," he said.
Somehow, he was right, and his stellar start to 2017 continued. The fourth-seeded Federer fought off those two match points and beat the 10th-seeded Berdych 6-2, 3-6, 7-6 (6) in the quarterfinals yesterday - avenging a third-set tiebreak loss to Berdych at Key Biscayne seven years ago in a match he still thinks he should have won.
Federer feels right at home at Key Biscayne, and so does Caroline Wozniacki - with good reason, since she sometimes practices at the facility. The 12th-seeded Wozniacki, a part-time South Florida resident, made the women's final for the first time in 10 tries by topping second-seeded Karolina Pliskova 5-7, 6-1, 6-1.
"This is one of the few tournaments where I've never made a finals," Wozniacki said. "I think my best result here was semifinals five years ago. It's always been a tournament where I wouldn't say I struggle, but I've just not had the results I wanted."
Kyrgios defeated 16th-seeded Alexander Zverev 6-4, 6-7 (9), 6-3 in the last of the men's quarters, a match that lasted 2 1/2 hours. Kyrgios had 16 aces, no double faults and never faced a break point, though his 19-year-old opponent saved five match points before falling.
Zverev fought off three match points in the second-set tiebreaker, and won the set when Kyrgios -- who pulled off two between-the-legs shots on the same point in the first set - tried another that didn't work.
He recovered and gets to face Federer, whom he called "the greatest of all time ... My favorite tennis player." Federer-Kyrgios is a rematch - sort of - from this year's quarterfinals at Indian Wells, a match where Kyrgios withdrew beforehand with an illness.
Rafael Nadal and Fabio Fognini are the other men's semifinalists, meaning there's still a chance for Federer-Nadal on Sunday for the men's crown.
"I would love it," Federer said.
Federer is now 4-0 in tiebreakers this year at Key Biscayne, none of the first three as pressure-packed as the one he needed in the quarters. He was serving for the match at 5-3 in the third and got broken, had a match point in the next game and couldn't convert, then was down 6-4 in the breaker before winning the final four points.
"I just lost by one point. That's what happened. Very simple, very straightforward," Berdych said. "He was the one serving out the match, didn't make it. I had a match point, didn't make it. I had two, didn't make it.
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