

Roger Federer rallied to beat good friend and his doubles partner this week, Tommy Haas, to advance to the Halle final.
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
- Roger Federer beats Tommy Haas in three sets to reach the final in Halle, Germany
- Federer meets Mikhail Youzhny on Sunday after the Russian eased past Richard Gasquet
- Federer is bidding to win his sixth title in Halle, a grass-court warm-up for Wimbledon
- Andy Murray advances to Queen’s final and will face defending champion Marin Cilic
(CNN) — Roger Federer had to work a little harder than he did Friday but the 17-time grand slam champion rallied past Tommy Haas at a Wimbledon warm-up in Germany to move one match away from winning his first title of the season.
In a battle of players over 30 — Federer turns 32 in August and Haas is 35 — the Swiss came through 3-6 6-3 6-4 in Halle. Mikhail Youzhny awaits in the final.
In the quarterfinals, Federer dispatched Haas’ fellow German, Mischa Zverev, 6-0 6-0 in under 40 minutes to register only the second ‘double bagel’ of his glittering career.
Read: Federer serves up double bagel
Zverev was a wildcard ranked 156th and so Federer knew he would be tested more in the last four against Haas, who beat him in the 2012 Halle finale.
“Clearly I wasn’t sure how well I was really playing coming into the semis,” Federer said. “Happily I was able to maintain a really high level of play.
“After losing the first set there is not much margin for error anymore.”
Federer has endured a difficult campaign — by his standards. His only other final came at May’s Rome Masters on clay, where he was beaten by Rafael Nadal in straight sets.
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Then at the French Open he was upset by Frenchman Jo-Wilfried Tsonga in the quarterfinals.
His last grand slam final came a year ago at Wimbledon when he downed home favorite Andy Murray for a seventh title at the All England Club.
Read: Federer wins seventh Wimbledon
“Honestly I’m playing pretty good for a long period of time,” he said. “Clearly I’m very happy to play the final tomorrow. It is a big final for me. After this we’ll focus on Wimbledon.”
If Federer defeats Russia’s Youzhny on Sunday — Youzhny, too, is a veteran who turns 31 this month — he would capture his sixth title in Halle but first since 2008.
Their head-to-head record suggests Federer should be the heavy favorite. He leads Youzhny, a 6-3 6-2 winner over second-seed Richard Gasquet on Saturday, 14-0.
Murray in London final
Center Court in Halle benefits from a roof but it’s not the case at the Queen’s Club in London, and the other men’s Wimbledon warm-up this week has been affected by adverse weather.
More rain Saturday led to both semifinals being delayed, with organizers eventually shifting one to an outer court.
Eventually Murray, like Federer, came from a set down to progress to the final. He beat fourth-seed Tsonga 4-6 6-3 6-2 in his first event since returning from a back injury, saving two break points at 3-3 in the second set.
“I managed to turn that match around against a top player,” Murray told the BBC. “He’s one of the best grass-court players in the world.”
Read: Murray misses French Open
At almost the same time, defending champion Marin Cilic ousted four-time tournament winner Lleyton Hewitt 6-4 4-6 6-2.
With rain expected Sunday, organizers moved the final to 12 p.m. local time, two hours earlier than originally scheduled.
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Ferrer serves to Nadal.
A member of the anti-gay marriage group “hommen” runs onto the court with a lit flare during the match.
Protesters light flares and unfurl a banner which calls for the French President Francois Hollande’s resignation on the top of Court Suzanne Lenglen as Nadal and Ferrer compete.
Ferrer returns a shot to Nadal.
Nadal serves to Ferrer.
Nadal serves to Ferrer.
Ferrer plays a forehand to Nadal.
Ferrer returns a shot to Nadal.
Nadal prepares to serve to Ferrer.
Nadal plays a backhand against Ferrer.
Ferrer plays a forehand against Nadal.
Nadal returns to Ferrer.













































An American tank crew takes a breather on the way through the town of Avranches, Normandy, summer 1944.
" border="0" height="360" id="articleGalleryPhoto003" style="margin:0 auto;display:none" width="640"/>“We thought it was going to be murder, but it wasn’t. To show you how easy it was, I ate my bar of chocolate. In every other operational trip, I sweated so much the chocolate they gave us melted in my breast pocket.” — Frank Scherschel describing his experiences photographing the Normandy invasion from the air before he joined Allied troops heading inland. Above: GIs search ruined homes in western France after D-Day.
" border="0" height="360" id="articleGalleryPhoto004" style="margin:0 auto;display:none" width="640"/>“All the civilized world loves France and Paris. Americans share this love with a special intimacy born in the kinship of our revolutions, our ideas and our alliances in two great wars.” — LIFE magazine on the relationship between the U.S. and its longtime European ally.
A church service is conducted in dappled sunlight, France, 1944.
" border="0" height="360" id="articleGalleryPhoto006" style="margin:0 auto;display:none" width="640"/>“Paris is like a magic sword in a fairy tale — a shining power in those hands to which it rightly belongs, in other hands tinsel and lead. Whenever the City of Light changes hands, Western civilization shifts its political balance. So it has been for seven centuries; so it was in 1940; so it was last week.” — LIFE after the French capital was liberated in August 1944.













