Home Blog Page 10902

Honda tops J.D. Power’s after-sales customer satisfaction index

AMONG the 10 auto brands evaluated in the J.D. Power 2018 Philippines Customer Service Index (CSI) Study, Honda ranked highest in after-sales customer satisfaction with an overall score of 823. According to the study released on Aug, 28, Honda “performed particularly well” in service initiation, service advisor, and service facility factors. This is the second year straight that Honda topped the CSI.
Following Honda were Nissan, with a score of 822, and Mitsubishi, which scored 816. Toyota, Isuzu, Ford, Suzuki, Chevrolet, Kia, and Hyundai completed the list.
J.D. Power said the availability of an express service was a key driver of customer satisfaction, particularly for customers who visit a dealer for routine maintenance. This year, the proportion of customers who were offered express service during their most recent visit rose to 55% from 17% in 2017, with 44% among them able to get their vehicle back within two hours. Overall satisfaction among these customers is higher than among those who did not select express service — or 820 points against 793 points, respectively, on a 1,000-point scale.
“With an increasingly fast-paced lifestyle, customers in the Philippines are time sensitive,” said Sigfred M. Doloroso, country manager for the Philippines at J.D. Power. “Given the decline in new-vehicle sales this year, dealerships have been trying to maximize their service revenue and improve capacity utilization. The retention of existing customers through systematic service reminders, notifications for due service, faster service turnaround and improved customer experience is the key to business viability.”
The 2018 CSI measured customer satisfaction with the servicing and vehicle-return processes. The study is based on the responses of 2,455 new-vehicle owners who purchased their vehicle between February 2015 and May 2017, and who took their vehicle for service to an authorized dealer or service center between August 2017 and May this year.

Ferrari’s new 488 Pista Spider is brand’s 50th drop-top model

FERRARI at the recent Concours d’Elegance in Pebble Beach, Caifornia, unveiled the new Ferrari 488 Pista Spider, the 50th drop-top model from the sports car maker. Ferrari explained it chose to introduce the 488’s convertible version in the US because its clients there, since the 1950s, have been “keen connoisseurs” of high-performance convertibles.
According to Ferrari, the 488 Pista Spider sets a “new benchmark” for performance among the brand’s convertibles as it gets an unprecedented weight-to-power ratio of 1.92 kilograms per unit of cavallo vapore. This is largely due to the car’s engine — a 3.9-liter, twin-turbo V8 that outputs 720 cv (or 710 hp). This power plant, Ferrari noted, has bested its category at the International Engine of the Year Awards in 2016, 2017 and 2018.
The 488 Pista Spider’s design is a natural evolution of that marking the model’s coupe version; Ferrari said its designers’ primary objective was to keep unaltered the car’s “perfect marriage of aerodynamic efficiency, purity of form and racing spirit.” Underlining this is a livery which runs the whole length of the car, expanding towards the rear. This, the car maker said, evokes the airflow and “exalts the lines” of the 488.
In the cabin, the 448 drop-top has been fitted with plenty of lightweight, pared-back components such as carbon-fiber and Alcantara. The car’s carpets were replaced by patterned aluminum foot plates, while the driver’s door handle has turned into a strap, to save weight.
Footwear for the 488 Pista Spider are new diamond-finish, 10-spoke, 20-inch alloy wheels, which recall Ferrari’s traditional mid-rear engine berlinetta-style rims. Also available are one-piece carbon-fiber wheels that are 20% lighter than the standard forged alloys.

Typhoon Jebi makes landfall in Japan, strongest in 25 years

Typhoon Jebi made landfall in western Japan on Tuesday, the strongest tropical cyclone to come ashore in 25 years, and has picked up speed as it bears down on one of the nation’s most densely populated areas.
The storm has paralyzed Japan’s second-largest population center, with flights and trains canceled across the Kansai region, companies forced to temporarily close their plants, and power cut to more than 350,000 homes and offices.
Jebi, the 21st typhoon of the season, had made landfall in Kobe, west of Osaka and Kyoto, as of 2:10 p.m. after earlier sweeping Japan’s smallest main island of Shikoku.
The typhoon was packing strong winds of up to 162 kilometers per hour (100 mph), according to the Japan Meteorological Agency, with gusts of up to 206 kph measured in Wakayama. That makes it a “very strong” typhoon, the second-highest on the JMA’s scale. It’s the first time for a typhoon to maintain that strength while making landfall since 1993.
The typhoon halted business in one of Japan’s main industrial centers. About 350,000 buildings were without power as of 2:15 p.m., according to regional utilities, mostly in Wakayama prefecture. More than 680,000 people had been issued evacuation orders or advisories, Asahi reported.
Trains stopped
West Japan Railway Co. halted all local services in the area’s three main cities, with some subway lines in Osaka also stopped. Shinkansen high-speed trains between Tokyo to Hiroshima were canceled.
ANA Holdings Inc. and Japan Airlines Co. canceled a total of 560 domestic and 13 international flights, while Kansai International Airport closed its runways as the typhoon approached, local broadcaster NHK reported. The Universal Studios Japan theme park, one of Osaka’s main tourist draws, will shut down for the entire day.
Authorities called on residents to avoid any unnecessary trips outside, and Prime Minister Shinzo Abe canceled a planned trip to Fukuoka in the southern island of Kyushu to deal with the disaster response.
Toyota Motor Corp. halted operations at most of its group plants, and Honda Motor Co. stopped its Suzuka plant in Mie prefecture. Kyocera Corp., Murata Manufacturing Co., Panasonic Corp. and Shiseido Co. were among manufacturers halting some of their facilities.
After hitting western Japan, Jebi is set to speed up further as it passes over the main island of Honshu and into the Sea of Japan, where it will weaken. While Tokyo will be spared the worst of the storm, authorities have warned of very strong winds and heavy rain even in the capital.
The typhoon is also bringing further downpours to areas that were devastated by sudden rainfall in early July that killed more than 200 people. Jebi is predicted to bring heavy rains through Wednesday.
Jebi is the fourth typhoon to make landfall in Japan this season. Recent years have seen an increase in the number of typhoons directly hitting Japan, with at least four making landfall every year since 2014. — Bloomberg

Drive+ auto service center opens in QC


Drive+ Car Care Center has opened shop on Quezon Avenue corner Panay Avenue, Quezon City. The center employs expert advisers and accredited technicians to provide professional services — which include routine maintenance, repairs and suspension work. It also sells a wide range of wheels and tires. The 3,000-square meter facility includes modern customer lounge. Leading the formal unveiling of Drive+ on Aug. 2 were brand manager Jason Manabat and Peter Hoffman, a former sales head at the Asia Pacific operations of Continental Tires. — A.B. Espinosa

Why the ride sharing transport industry has floundered

UNLESS you live in a far-flung province and have never set foot in Metro Manila in the last few years, there’s a good chance you’ve already tried getting around using TNVS — or transport network vehicle service. It’s like riding a taxicab, but instead of hailing a public-utility car by the roadside, you do so from the air-conditioned comfort of your home or office, using an app installed on your smart phone. You probably know this service by the popular companies that provide it, like Grab (or Uber, before it sold its Southeast Asian business to Grab).
You may have also heard that this particular sector of our transport industry is struggling. It’s struggling with government regulations. It’s struggling with the existing fare structure. It’s struggling with the supposedly inadequate supply of available cars and drivers.
The last is particularly alarming. What used to be a total of 125,000 vehicles between Grab and Uber is now down to 35,000, according to Grab. This is the result of, first, the 65,000-car limit imposed by the Land Transportation Franchising and Regulatory Board (LTFRB) early this year, and, second, the refusal of former Uber drivers to cross over to Grab. But perhaps more tellingly, in an interview with the motoring website Visor, Grab Philippines public affairs head Leo Gonzales said that some 15% of drivers quit every quarter. The reason? These drivers no longer find the gig to be financially rewarding, and so they just move on to the next job.
Even TNVS drivers who own the cars themselves leave. A former Grab and Uber driver told me that he spent P4,165 a day just to operate one of his cars (a Mitsubishi Mirage G4 and a Toyota Wigo) for a transport network company (TNC). This amount included car amortization, fuel, meals, the TNC’s commission (25%), and other miscellaneous expenses. Which meant he had to earn more than P4,165 within a 24-hour period just to earn something. And so he stopped driving for Grab in March this year and now works for a life insurance firm.
What happened? Why are TNVS drivers suddenly scrapping for decent profit? There used to be a time when these drivers made so much money that many office employees simply gave up their salaried jobs, bought a car for TNVS use, and decided to drive for either Grab or Uber (or both).
I can think of three major reasons why the TNVS gig is now having a difficult time sustaining its workers.
First, the original business model was not preserved. There’s a reason this mode of transportation is referred to as “ride-sharing.” The idea is to share, not to rent or ply. The initial concept was for private car owners to make their vehicles available for other commuters who needed to travel on the same route. The proposition, I believe, was something along the lines of “make money while you drive to your office.” This wasn’t meant to be a full-time job for drivers. The app was simply a way to connect car owners who had empty passenger seats, with commuters who didn’t have a ride but were headed in the same direction. It was supposed to be a win-win situation: The car owner would make some extra dough, and the roads would see fewer vehicles as the setup essentially promoted carpooling.
What happened instead was that enterprising individuals made it a full-time, moneymaking venture. Some operators even purchased more than one car and hired drivers to run them. In this sense, it became just a glorified taxi service, minus the exterior liveries and the metered fares. Before we knew it, the number of TNVS vehicles had ballooned to 125,000 — significantly contributing to vehicle traffic and basically shrinking the income pie to be shared by the drivers.
Second, with Uber now gone and with Grab the only major TNC in our market, the incentives that were previously used to entice and motivate drivers have all but disappeared. Ask any TNVS driver and he’ll tell you that those incentives were the gravy that sweetened the pot and made the work (and all the time spent in traffic) worth it. Without these bonuses, some drivers are now having a hard time making ends meet.
Third, our slow-to-react LTFRB can’t seem to regulate TNVS players properly. In the eyes of government regulators, TNCs are just a smart phone-aided taxi service. Hence the strict rules on fare pricing. I say let the players determine their fares. TNVS shouldn’t be treated as a basic mode of public transportation. It’s a luxury for people who can afford it. If the TNCs price themselves out of the market, that’s on them. And if riders are willing to pay what the TNCs are charging them, why stop them? Just make sure these companies pay the proper taxes and put in place all the necessary safeguards to guarantee public safety.
I still maintain that TNCs need to be regulated, but they should be regulated using an entirely different set of rules. You can’t lump them together with taxi and bus operators. It’s in this area where the LTFRB has continued to disappoint.
Meanwhile, as you read this, Grab is preparing to roll out a service dubbed GrabHitch, which the TNC describes as “social carpooling.” This means private motorists can pick up riders who are traveling in the same direction, and ask these riders to share in the fuel expense. This isn’t for profit, Grab told Visor, just a way for private car owners to help with the current public transportation crisis. Come to think of it, this was the original concept of the so-called ride-sharing.

PAL cancels flights to Osaka due to super typhoon Jebi

Philippine Airlines (PAL) has cancelled flights on Tuesday, Sept. 4, to and from Osaka Kansai in Japan, because of the temporary closure of Kansai International Airport and the closure of an access bridge as the city is being battered by super typhoon Jebi.
“All Philippine Airlines (PAL) flights to and from Osaka Kansai (Japan) are cancelled today, September 4, 2018, as strong wind and heavy rains from super typhoon Jebi caused the temporary closure of Kansai International Airport, which has been affected by flooding and a closure of the access bridge to the mainland.”
PAL said land transport to Kansai Airport from Osaka City has been disrupted after a tanker ship was blown by strong winds and hit the connecting bridge.
The flagship carrier said it will advise passengers on further updates on the status of the regular and/or replacement flights originally scheduled for today. It added that passengers of cancelled flights will be rebooked on the next available flights or replacement flights, or may choose to be rerouted via other suitable airports in Japan.

Beermen go for second win before PBA break

By Michael Angelo S. Murillo, Senior Reporter
VICTORIOUS in their Philippine Basketball Association Governors’ Cup debut at the weekend, the San Miguel Beermen go for their second win today in the last PBA play date before it takes a two-week break for the preparation of the national team for the fourth window of the FIBA World Cup Asian Qualifiers.
To take on Blackwater Elite (1-0) in the 4:30 p.m. opener at the Smart Araneta Coliseum, the Beermen look to stay unbeaten early in the season-ending PBA tournament, building on their 125-112 victory over the NLEX Road Warriors in their tournament-opening game on Sept. 1.
San Miguel got its campaign to an auspicious start led by big man Christian Standhardinger who played straight from the airport a couple of hours before game time after his stint with the national team at the 18th Asian Games in Indonesia.
Mr. Standhardinger had a career-high 36 points to go along with 11 rebounds to more than make up for the absence of league most valuable player June Mar Fajardo, who is expected to miss some time because of a shin injury.
Import Arizona Reid complemented Mr. Standhardinger with 30 points, 13 rebounds and six assists as the Beermen outlasted the Road Warriors.
Alex Cabganot had 23 points and nine assists while Marcio Lassiter added 14 points.
San Miguel Coach Leo Austria welcomed the win and said they hope that it would set the tone for them in the Governors’ Cup while also commending the play of Mr. Standhardinger.
“We are glad to be able to snatch this win. Usually every start of the conference we struggle but tonight we did not. Maybe it was because of our loss in the finals last conference and the players wanted to step up,” said Mr. Austria, referring to their 4-2 finals loss to the Barangay Ginebra San Miguel Kings in the Commissioner’s Cup.
“Christian really played well, He was tired but decided to play nonetheless. His stint in the Asian Games should help him in his confidence,” he added.
Out to derail San Miguel is Blackwater, itself a winner in its tournament debut.
The Elite defeated the TNT KaTropa, 104-98, in overtime on Aug. 24 behind the hot shooting of Allein Maliksi, who finished with a team-high 28 points, with import Henry Walker providing 23 points and 14 rebounds.
It was close fight right from the start with the outcome only decided in the closing moments of extra time.
Blackwater will get extra help in today’s game as it welcomes back Poy Erram from the Asian Games.
Playing in the main game at 7 p.m., meanwhile, are the defending champion Barangay Ginebra (2-0) and Northport (0-3).
TWO-WEEK BREAK
Meanwhile, after today’s double-header the PBA goes on a two-week break to give way to the fourth window of the FIBA World Cup Asian Qualifiers.
Gilas Pilipinas plays in the second round of the qualifiers against Iran on Sept. 13 away and then host in a closed-door match Qatar on Sept. 17 at the Big Dome.
The closed-door home match was part of the sanctions meted by FIBA on the Philippines following the July 2 brawl between Gilas and Australia in the third window of the qualifiers.
Gilas, to be coached by Yeng Guiao in place of the suspended Chot Reyes, officially began training on Monday night at the Meralco Gym in Pasig City with a 16-man pool.
Part of the pool are Messrs. Standhardinger, Maliksi and Erram, Greg Slaughter, Scottie Thompson, Raymond Almazan, Beau Belga, Gabe Norwood, Alex Cabagnot, Japeth Aguilar, Marcio Lassiter, Ian Sangalang, Matthew Wright, Paul Lee, Stanley Pringle and Asi Taulava.
Regular PBA action resumes on Sept. 19.

Sharapova crashes at US Open

NEW YORK — Maria Sharapova was knocked out of the US Open in the fourth round on Monday, losing 6-4, 6-3 to Spanish birthday girl Carla Suarez Navarro who inflicted the Russian’s first ever night-time loss at the tournament.
Sharapova, the 2006 champion who was trying to reach the quarter-finals for the first time since 2012, hit 38 unforced errors and dropped serve six times.
The defeat ended the former world number one’s perfect record of 23 wins — 22 of them on Arthur Ashe Stadium — in night sessions at Flushing Meadows.
Suarez Navarro, who celebrated her 30th birthday Monday, was a quarter-finalist in New York in 2013.
“Maria has played here at night many times so I knew I needed to be aggressive, focussed and play solid,” said the 30th seeded Spaniard after clinching a second win in six meetings with Sharapova.
“I told myself to run and fight — that’s the way I can play really good tennis.”
She will face 2017 runner-up Madison Keys for a place in the semi-finals.
“Madison is from the United States so I guess all the crowd will be for her.
“I have played her a few times. She has a great serve and plenty of experience on this court.”
Sharapova, who won the last of her five Slams at Roland Garros in 2014, has endured a disappointing return to the majors since the end of her drugs ban in April of 2017.
She made the fourth round in New York last year, third round in Australia in January, quarter-finals in Paris before a first round exit at Wimbledon.
Her loss to Russia’s Vitalia Diatchenko, the world number 132 at the time, at the All England Club was her first opening round Wimbledon defeat and earliest Grand Slam exit in eight years.
“I definitely expected more from the Slams this year,” said the 31-year-old.
“But I have the motivation and belief every day to continue.”
Keys made the last-eight with a 6-1, 6-3 win over Dominika Cibulkova.
The other quarter-final in the bottom part of the draw will see Japan’s Naomi Osaka face Lesia Tsurenko of Ukraine.
Osaka, the 20th seed, made the last-eight of a major for the first time by beating Aryna Sabalenka of Belarus 6-3, 2-6, 6-4.
Tsurenko also made sure of a maiden quarter-final at the Slams by seeing off Czech teenager Marketa Vondrousova.
‘BREAK A LEG’
Eighteen of Sharapova’s unforced errors came in an untidy first set where she trailed 1-4 and 2-5.
In the second set, she retrieved a break for 1-1 but dropped serve again in the fifth and ninth games with her fate sealed by a wild backhand.
Osaka reached her first Grand Slam quarter-final, tearfully admitting she was prepared to “break a leg” to win the match.
The 20-year-old became the first Japanese woman in the US Open last-eight since Shinobu Asagoe in 2004.
Osaka, seeded 20, came back from a break down in the final set to take the tie on a fourth match point when Sabalenka served up an eighth double fault.
“I would never have forgiven myself if I had lost that match,” said a tearful Osaka.
“When I was a break down in the final set I thought I would even break a leg if needed so I could get to every ball.”
Tsurenko, 29, had been on the brink of collapse due to heat exhaustion before seeing off Vondrousova.
World number 36 Tsurenko was a set and 0-2 down when she bent double on the sizzling Grandstand court, looking increasingly unsteady in the 33-degree heat and crushing humidity.
“I was really dizzy and I asked nature or God or somebody please move the shade over faster,” said the woman who put out world number two Caroline Wozniacki in the second round.
In the two-hour 32-minute match, which featured 13 breaks of serve, Tsurenko committed 57 unforced errors while 19-year-old Vondrousova hit a huge 73.
The Czech world number 103 thought that Tsurenko was exaggerating her distress.
“I was angry. It was weird because she called the doctor and then she was playing normally. I don’t get it,” she said.
The two other quarter-finals will feature six-time champion Serena Williams against Karolina Pliskova, the Czech eighth seed, while third seed Stephens faces Latvia’s Anastasija Sevastova. — AFP

Lyceum Pirates collect 10th straight victory

By Michael Angelo S. Murillo, Senior Reporter
THE National Collegiate Athletic Association Season 94 juggernaut that is the Lyceum Pirates continued to roll on Tuesday as they raced to their 10th victory in as many games with an 88-70 win over the struggling San Sebastian Stags at the FilOil Flying V Centre in San Juan City.
Displaying steady composure, the Pirates (10-0) kept the Stags (1-9) at bay throughout the contest as they secured the win streak-keeping victory while adding to the season misery of tailending San Sebastian.
The contest started tight with the two teams fighting to a 13-10 count, with Lyceum on top, after five minutes in the opening quarter.
But led by reigning league most valuable player CJ Perez, Lyceum would end the frame on a flourish, outscoring its opponent, 14-3, to hold a 27-13 advantage after 10 minutes.
The Stags, however, would fight back in the second quarter as Allyn Bulanadi and JM Calma made their presence felt.
They managed to cut Lyceum’s lead to four points midway into the period but could not go beyond that as Jaycee and Jayvee Marcelino and Mike Nzeusseu towed the Pirates on another breakaway en route to finishing the first half with a 46-36 advantage.
In the third period, Lyceum tried to blow the game wide open, going on a 14-7 run to stretched their lead to 17 points, 60-43, with 6:12 to go in the quarter.
Michael Calisaan though helped stopped the bleeding for San Sebastian, which racked up eight straight points in the next minute and half to narrow the gap at nine points, 60-51.
The Stags charged back further but the Pirates would survive the onslaught to maintain a 65-59 lead heading into the final quarter. The erstwhile suspended RK Ilagan and Calisaan tried to jump-start the offense of San Sebastian to begin the fourth with some success only to be countered eventually by Lyceum’s defense.
The Pirates held a 13-point lead, 79-66, with four minutes left on the clock and took it from there on their way to the victory.
Perez led Lyceum with 21 points, nine rebounds and five steals while Jaycee Marcelino finished with 17 points, six rebounds, three assists and two steals.
Jayvee Marcelino had 14 points and six assists.
Calisaan, meanwhile, paced San Sebastian with 17 points and 11 rebounds while Bulanadi and Ilagan each had 13 points. Calma ended up with 10.

Final 12 lineup of Gilas hinges on Slaughter’s eligibility — Yeng Guiao

GREG Slaughter is one player Yeng Guiao loves to bring aboard Gilas Pilipinas’ next mission in the coming window of the FIBA Asia World Cup qualifier.
But the center’s eligibility has somewhat derailed the pinch-hitting coach’s plans of baring the Final 12 during their first official workout late Monday night at the Meralco Gym.
“There are still issues which prevent me from naming the final lineup. We have to be certain on the situation of Greg, Christian (Standhardinger) and Stanley (Pringle). If we’re not able to complete the documents of Greg, the situation will become much difficult because we have to choose among those three guys who we will designate as our naturalized players,” Guiao told sportswriters.
“We hope we can make them play as locals and Filipinos, but we’re not able to fix their eligibilities as Filipinos as of this point.”
Slaughter played for the national team for many years as a member of the amateur-laden SMART-Gilas Pilipinas, including the Asian Games, SEABA and Stankovic Cup. But he was barred from playing in the 2011 FIBA Asia Championship as only Marcio Lassiter and Chris Lutz were given the go signal by the organizers at that time.
“There are still papers needed. Those documents have not been completed yet,” added Guiao.
Slaughter said he had informed his relatives in the United States to submit the necessary documents that may allow him to play as a local player for this new batch of national squad to be handled by pinch-hitting mentor Guiao in lieu of suspended coach Chot Reyes.
“I just got to get some documents back in the States right now. Hopefully, my parents can send them over. Hopefully, I’ll be eligible,” added Slaughter. — Rey Joble

Martial arts dream lives on for Edward ‘The Ferocious’ Kelly

LOST two of his last three matches that derailed his charge to contention for the featherweight title in ONE Championship, Filipino Edward “The Ferocious” Kelly remains undeterred in living his martial arts dream and continue to be the best version of himself as a fighter.
Set to make his ONE return on Sept. 8 as part of the main card for “ONE: Beyond the Horizon” in Shanghai, China, Baguio native Kelly, 34, said he is bent on getting back on the winning track after absorbing a tough technical knockout loss in June against former champion Narantungalang Jadambaa.
It was the second defeat in three fights for Team Lakay’s Kelly, who lost to Emilio Urrutia by unanimous decision in August last year that effectively halted his three-fight winning streak.
Mr. Kelly though managed to squeeze in an impressive win over Meas Meu in January this year where he knocked out his opponent in just 21 seconds.
Off a loss, Mr. Kelly said it only stoked the fire in him to go out and improve.
“After my bout against Narantungalag Jadambaa, I was so disappointed in myself because I was not able to showcase all the months of hard work I put into training. But although I did not get the victory, it made me realize just how much more I had to improve so that I can become a better martial artist,” said Mr. Kelly in the lead-up to Beyond the Horizon.
“I realized that there are a lot of holes in my game, and that the only way to get better is to recognize my weaknesses,” he added.
At Beyond the Horizon, which will take place at the Baoshan Arena, Mr. Kelly is to face Christian “The Warrior” Lee of Singapore.
Heading into the fight, Mr. Kelly acknowledges that he is the underdog against Mr. Lee but nonetheless does not see it as much of an issue but more a of motivation to prove his doubters wrong.
“It’s good to be an underdog because it boosts my motivation to win. When you’re an underdog, others believe that you have a small chance to win. But in some instances, some fighters use it as an extra drive in their fights,” he said.
“I’m a hundred percent ready to go back in there again. In victory or in defeat, I will never stop doing what I love to do. I never stop training. I train all year round. Whether I have an upcoming fight or not, I’m always prepared. True martial artists are always in search of perfection of their craft. I can’t wait to go back inside the ring or cage and show the world how much better I have gotten,” Mr. Kelly added.
ONE: Beyond the Horizon will be headlined by the women’s strawweight world championship fight between champion Xiong Jing Nan of China and challenger Samara Santos of Brazil.
Co-headlining is the featherweight clash between Honorio Banario of the Philippines and Amir Khan of Singapore. — Michael Angelo S. Murillo

Five-time champion Roger Federer knocked out of US Open by lowly Aussie John Millman in four sets

NEW YORK — Five-time champion Roger Federer crashed out of the US Open on Monday, beaten in four sets by 55th-ranked Australian John Millman.
Millman’s 3-6, 7-5, 7-6 (9/7), 7-6 (7/3) victory in his first Grand Slam fourth round match scuppered a blockbuster quarter-final between Federer and two-time winner Novak Djokovic.
Djokovic, who ended a 54-week title drought with his 13th Grand Slam title at Wimbledon
“Very happy to get this one done in straight sets,” said Djokovic, who left the court for a medical evaluation early in the third set but returned to wrap things up in exactly two hours.
Kei Nishikori, runner-up in 2014, was also pleased to get through in three sets in blazing sunshine on Louis Armstrong Stadium.
After racing through the first two sets against Germany’s Philipp Kohlschreiber he dropped his serve while serving for the match at 5-4 in the third, but managed to prevail 6-3, 6-2, 7-5.
It marked Federer’s earliest US Open exit since he fell in straight sets to Tommy Robredo in the fourth round in 2013.
Federer had set points in both the second and third sets, but troubles with his serve infected his entire game and 77 unforced errors doomed the 20-time Grand Slam champion in the face of a determined attack from Millman.
“I’m probably in a little bit of disbelief,” Millman, 29, said after three hours and 35 minutes in the cauldron of Arthur Ashe Stadium.
“I have so much respect for Roger and everything he’s done for the game. He’s been a hero of mine.”
Federer took the opening set courtesy of a break in Millman’s first service game.
But Federer’s first service game in the second — in which he battled 14 minutes and saved six break points — proved prophetic.
Federer broke first on the way to a 5-3 lead in the set, but Millman won the last four games, breaking Federer twice.
Federer wasted two set points in the 10th game, giving Millman a break chance when he missed an easy volley then double-faulting on break point.
Federer upped his game in a tight third set, and had the first chance to claim the set at 6-5 in the tiebreaker. He netted a service return, and Millman converted his second set point to seize a two sets to one lead.
When the Swiss great broke for a 4-2 lead in the fourth the Ashe crowd were on their feet.
But he gave the break back in the next game after slamming an overhead into the bottom of the net on game point.
They went on serve the rest of the way to the tiebreaker, where two of Federer’s 10 double faults, followed by a backhand into the net and a wayward forehand gave Millman a 6-1 lead.
Federer clawed his way through two match points before slapping yet another forehand wide as Millman celebrated.
“Today he was definitely not at his best,” Millman said of Federer. “But I’ll take it.” — AFP