<p>Roger Federer moved into pole position for a US Open title run, capturing his seventh Cincinnati Masters with a dominant 7-6 (7/1), 6-3 win over Novak Djokovic.<br /><br /></p>.<p>The 34-year-old Swiss star yesterday added the Serbian world number one to a victims' list which included Andy Murray in the semi-finals, capping a near-perfect week for the 17-time Grand Slam winner.<br /><br />Federer was playing his first tournament since falling to Djokovic in the Wimbledon final.<br />He passed up the Montreal Masters won by Murray last week, preferring to rest and prepare at home.<br /><br />"It's great, I didn't expect it, to be quite honest. I knew I had a chance, but I still felt more guys were going to have a better shot than I had because they had played Montreal before," Federer said.<br /><br />"Usually that helps. But I've realized over all the years that it's just really difficult to win back-to-back Montreal and Cincinnati, or Toronto and Cincinnati.<br />"I chose to roll the dice a little bit and see how things were going to go. If they went great here then it was a great plan.<br /><br />"If not, I was going to go back and practice and be really motivated for the US Open to start."<br />The gamble paid off for Federer, who needed 90 minutes to subdue Djokovic.<br /><br />With the win he takes back the world number two ranking Murray seized for a week and will be seeded second behind Djokovic at Flushing Meadows for the season's concluding Grand Slam which starts on August 31.<br /><br />Federer claimed his 87th career ATP title and his 24th trophy in a Masters 1000 event.<br />Djokovic, meanwhile, was thwarted in his bid to become the first man to win all nine of the elite Masters 1000 titles as he endured his fifth final defeat at Cincinnati -- the lone Masters missing from his resume.<br /><br />The Serbian world number one has now fallen in the final of both of his tune-up events for the US Open, having lost to Murray in Montreal.<br /><br />He didn't muster a break point against Federer, whose superiority was clear in the first-set tiebreaker. <br /><br />Federer's variety of shots included an aggressive return on selected second serves, in which he advanced almost to the service line to surprise the Serb.<br /><br />After seizing a 4-1 lead in the second set, Federer gave himself three match points with his seventh ace of the contest and converted on the first to the cheers of a partisan crowd.<br /><br />The 34-year-old -- who wasn't broken all week -- nudged ahead of Djokovic 21-20 in their head-to-head series.<br /><br />"I think we really get the best out of each other, we've improved a lot over the years playing each other," Federer said.<br /><br />After struggling all week, Djokovic said he knew Federer would be a tough nut to crack.<br />"I knew coming in that he was going to be aggressive, no question about it. So I tried to handle it," he said.<br /><br />"I did well until the tiebreak in the first set. After that, he was just the better player. I had some double-faults, dropped my service game.<br /><br />"The way I played this week, it's great I managed to reach the finals."Djokovic isn't giving up on his Cincinnati dream.<br /><br />"This year I got to the final, it's a step closer," he said. "I'm going to keep going, keep fighting to make history.<br /><br />"Obviously it's a great incentive and inspired me to come back and play my best tennis."<br />Federer fancies his chances at the US Open in New York, where he won the last of his five titles in 2008.<br /><br />"I've got the confidence, I've got the matches, and I'm actually still feeling really fresh even after this week, because the matches have been rather short," he said.<br /><br />"Because I didn't play both tournaments (Montreal and Cincinnati), I can really pace myself next week and see how much practice I actually really need."</p>
<p>Roger Federer moved into pole position for a US Open title run, capturing his seventh Cincinnati Masters with a dominant 7-6 (7/1), 6-3 win over Novak Djokovic.<br /><br /></p>.<p>The 34-year-old Swiss star yesterday added the Serbian world number one to a victims' list which included Andy Murray in the semi-finals, capping a near-perfect week for the 17-time Grand Slam winner.<br /><br />Federer was playing his first tournament since falling to Djokovic in the Wimbledon final.<br />He passed up the Montreal Masters won by Murray last week, preferring to rest and prepare at home.<br /><br />"It's great, I didn't expect it, to be quite honest. I knew I had a chance, but I still felt more guys were going to have a better shot than I had because they had played Montreal before," Federer said.<br /><br />"Usually that helps. But I've realized over all the years that it's just really difficult to win back-to-back Montreal and Cincinnati, or Toronto and Cincinnati.<br />"I chose to roll the dice a little bit and see how things were going to go. If they went great here then it was a great plan.<br /><br />"If not, I was going to go back and practice and be really motivated for the US Open to start."<br />The gamble paid off for Federer, who needed 90 minutes to subdue Djokovic.<br /><br />With the win he takes back the world number two ranking Murray seized for a week and will be seeded second behind Djokovic at Flushing Meadows for the season's concluding Grand Slam which starts on August 31.<br /><br />Federer claimed his 87th career ATP title and his 24th trophy in a Masters 1000 event.<br />Djokovic, meanwhile, was thwarted in his bid to become the first man to win all nine of the elite Masters 1000 titles as he endured his fifth final defeat at Cincinnati -- the lone Masters missing from his resume.<br /><br />The Serbian world number one has now fallen in the final of both of his tune-up events for the US Open, having lost to Murray in Montreal.<br /><br />He didn't muster a break point against Federer, whose superiority was clear in the first-set tiebreaker. <br /><br />Federer's variety of shots included an aggressive return on selected second serves, in which he advanced almost to the service line to surprise the Serb.<br /><br />After seizing a 4-1 lead in the second set, Federer gave himself three match points with his seventh ace of the contest and converted on the first to the cheers of a partisan crowd.<br /><br />The 34-year-old -- who wasn't broken all week -- nudged ahead of Djokovic 21-20 in their head-to-head series.<br /><br />"I think we really get the best out of each other, we've improved a lot over the years playing each other," Federer said.<br /><br />After struggling all week, Djokovic said he knew Federer would be a tough nut to crack.<br />"I knew coming in that he was going to be aggressive, no question about it. So I tried to handle it," he said.<br /><br />"I did well until the tiebreak in the first set. After that, he was just the better player. I had some double-faults, dropped my service game.<br /><br />"The way I played this week, it's great I managed to reach the finals."Djokovic isn't giving up on his Cincinnati dream.<br /><br />"This year I got to the final, it's a step closer," he said. "I'm going to keep going, keep fighting to make history.<br /><br />"Obviously it's a great incentive and inspired me to come back and play my best tennis."<br />Federer fancies his chances at the US Open in New York, where he won the last of his five titles in 2008.<br /><br />"I've got the confidence, I've got the matches, and I'm actually still feeling really fresh even after this week, because the matches have been rather short," he said.<br /><br />"Because I didn't play both tournaments (Montreal and Cincinnati), I can really pace myself next week and see how much practice I actually really need."</p>