
Karlovic
has more than a big serve
Improved all-court game puts big Croat on
brink of Top 20
By Abe Kuijl, Special to TennisReporters.net

Mark LyonsIvo Karlovic is tapping on the edge of the Top 20.
FROM THE ABN AMRO WTT IN
ROTTERDAM – With
his 6’, 10” height, Ivo Karlovic is the tallest player
in the Top 100, but the big-serving Croat has never been considered
as a potential top player. Despite the fact that Karlovic will turn
29 next week, he is rising fast in the rankings.
Karlovic routed German qualifier Mischa Zverev 6-3,
6-1 in the quarterfinals on Friday, and needs one more win on Saturday
to secure a Top-20 spot.
He will face Frenchman Michael Llodra, a 7-6(5), 7-6(5)
victor over Robin Haase, in the semis.
“It is unbelievable. It was always my hope [to
become a Top-20 player], but especially in 2006 when I was injured and
I missed almost six months it was not really close, but now I’m
happy that I’m almost there,” said the current No. 24.
Karlovic never was a great
player from the backcourt, and he owed his Top 100-ranking almost completely
on his monster serve. Due to his extreme height, Karlovic can not only
hit his delivery with massive pace, but he’s also able to create
sharp angles, earning him an average of over 20 aces per match.
But in Rotterdam, it’s not only his serve that
is impressing the Dutch fans. In the matches he’s played this week
against Olivier Rochus, Tomas Berdych and Zverev, Karlovic has been the
dominant player in the rallies in all of them. His volleys are excellent,
and so is his forehand, with which he’s been hitting a ton of winners.
He’s a bit shaky when hitting his one-handed backhand, but he often
chooses for the slice, which really bites. Karlovic likes to come in
after those balls, and with his imposing posture, he’s nearly impossible
to pass at the net.
LATE BREAKTHROUGH
If he were ten
years younger and playing like this, Karlovic would have been a lock
to become a consistent Top-10 player, if not highter. Why did it take
so long for the Croat to evolve his game and become a threat to the world’s
best?
“When I was younger I didn’t really have
any support,” he said. “I was travelling alone, no coach,
no money, so I was struggling and that is why I could not go up as quickly
as everybody else. Being in Croatia is not like in other European countries
where the associations are going to help a lot for the players with wild
cards and everything.”
Karlovic didn’t start travelling with a coach
until he was 24, back in 2003. He made his big break that year when he
defeated defending champion Lleyton Hewitt at Wimbledon in the first
round. “It was a big turning point in my career, because I realise
that I can [play with the best]. And after my confidence was really high
and I continue to play well and reach Top 100 that year.”
Karlovic was the only player beside Roger Federer
to win titles on three different surfaces last season. He triumphed at
the indoor event of Stockholm and on the grass of Nottingham, but his
most surprising title came at the clay courts of Houston, where he beat
then No. 10 Tommy Haas en route to the championship.
“I was especially surprised [that I won] on
the clay court, because usually it’s not my best surface,” Karlovic
said. “I was running well, I was playing well from the baseline
and also tactically I was playing really well.”
Karlovic is the highest-ranked
player of the semifinalists in Rotterdam, but he isn’t considering himself to be the favorite
to win the event. “No, no, I don’t put any pressure on myself
like that. All the players left in the tournament are ranked lower than
me, so I think that I have a good chance now. But I’m just going
to enjoy every match and hopefully I’m going to play as well as
today.”
If he can maintain his current
form, Karlovic can move up a lot higher in the rankings over the next
weeks. He didn’t
play in Indian Wells last year, whereas he lost in the first round in
Miami.
Gilles Simon goes up against Robin Soderling in the
other semifinal. Simon bested Russian qualifier Teimuraz Gabashvili 6-3,
6-2, while Soderling defeated Andreas Seppiby the same score. Seppi had
beaten both Lleyton Hewitt and Rafael Nadal en route to the quarters.
© TennisReporters.net 2008

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