Top seed and defending champion Novak Djokovic stepped up his bid for a third Indian Wells tennis title by easing past 12th seed Nicolas Almagro 6-3 6-4 on Thursday.
World No.1 Djokovic has beaten Almagro in all three career meetings and he has reached the Indian Wells semis for the third year in a row.
Djokovic, who has won the past three grand slams, is coming off one of the best years in tennis history, as he started off 2011 with 41 consecutive match wins. He is 14-1 in 2012.
“I have had a lot of success here in the past and won it twice,” said Djokovic. “Last year was incredible. I may not be able to repeat what I did but I will try my best.”
The Serbian next faces American 11th seed John Isner who defeated Gilles Simon of France 6-3 1-6 7-5 in another quarter-final.
Djokovic hammered five aces and won 77 per cent of his first serve points in the 82-minute match on Thursday.
“What made me happy was my serve,” he said. “I served well. I didn’t lose many points on my service games in both sets, and that’s something that I have been working on. I have been trying to get more free points on the first serves.”
Djokovic broke Almagro twice in taking the opening set in 30 minutes but had a tougher time in the second as Almagro started to connect with his first serve.
Tied 3-3 in the second set and serving, Almagro hit a backhand winner to reach game point, which he closed out with an ace.
But Djokovic won the next three games, breaking Almagro’s serve in the ninth game and then served for the victory. He clinched the match on his first match point with a backhand winner.
Almagro is one of the busiest players on the ATP Tour this year as this was his seventh tournament. He captured his 11th career singles title in Sao Paulo last month.
“Today I had a very powerful ball striker on the opposite side of the net,” Djokovic said.
Isner, 26, has won both career meetings against Simon, including a three-hour, 39-minute battle in the fourth round of the 2011 US Open.
Isner fired 11 aces, had three double faults and won 69 per cent of his first-serve points.
“I am thankful to get through,” he said. “Tonight I didn’t get too frustrated. I made a lot of mistakes but he does that to a lot of players.”
Djokovic says it doesn’t get easier from here on.
“As the tournament goes on, you’re going to play more difficult opponents,” he said.
Djokovic’s win keeps alive the prospect that the game’s big three – Djokovic, Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal – could make it to the semi-finals.
Federer and Nadal are both in quarter-final action on Friday, against Argentines. Federer faces ninth seed Juan Martin del Potro and Nadal squares off against unseeded David Nalbandian.
All three reached the semis five times in 2011 and also at this year’s Australian Open.
