Federer to face Cilic in Aussie Open final
Defending champion Roger Federer (L) is targeting a 20th Grand Slam singles title after securing a spot in the Australian Open final against Marin Cilic.

Defending champion Roger Federer strolled into the Australian Open final in a bitter-sweet win after Chung Hyeon retired injured in their semi-final and the Swiss star will now face Marin Cilic in Sunday's final



It took just over an hour for Roger Federer to fix an anomalous statistic in his extraordinary career. Defending champion Federer moved to within one win of a 20th Grand Slam singles title on Friday night when Hyeon Chung retired in the second set of their Australian Open semifinal. He was leading 6-1, 5-2 when the 21-year-old Chung quit because of blisters on his left foot - or "blisters under blisters under blisters," according to his agent. Federer faces No. 6-seeded Marin Cilic on Sunday in what will be his record seventh Australian Open final and 30th at a Grand Slam.

Cilic was hampered by blisters when he lost to Federer in last year's Wimbledon final, but he has made a relatively pain-free run through the other half of the draw, including a quarterfinal win over an injured Nadal.

The 21-year-old Chung had an incredible run at Melbourne Park, becoming the first Korean to reach a semifinal at a tennis major and attracting plenty of attention for beating No. 4-seeded Alexander Zverev in the third round and upsetting six-time Australian Open champion Novak Djokovic in the fourth. But it took a toll. He needed a pain-killing injection before the match, and a medical timeout to re-tape his left foot after going down a break in the second set. He only played two more games before he quit.

"I think I did right thing. If I play bad on the court, it's not good for the fans and audience as well," he said. "I really hurt. I can't walk no more."

Federer predicted a bright future for Chung, who also will be more prepared next time for the rigors of the best-of-five set tennis at the Grand Slams.

"For sure. I play really good in last two weeks. I make first Round 16, quarters and semis - I play (Zverev), Novak, Roger. I really good experience in last two weeks," he said. "I think I can play better and better in the future."

Federer started to sense something was wrong with Chung by the movement of his rival, and he was utterly dominant until that point.

After all, the 36-year-old Swiss star had the standing of the so-called Big Four to protect - there hasn't been a final at Melbourne Park since 2005 that hasn't featured Federer, Nadal, Djokovic or Andy Murray. Stan Wawrinka's win over Nadal in 2014 was the only final since 2008 that didn't feature two of the Big Four.

Cilic beat top-ranked Nadal in the quarterfinals and Chung stunned six-time champion Djokovic in the fourth round. And Murray, a five-time Australian Open runner-up, withdrew from the season-opening major to have surgery on his hip, leaving their collective reputation for dominance in Australia on Federer. He didn't let anyone down in a clinical dismantling of the No. 58-ranked Chung, who won the Next Gen ATP Finals last November. Earlier, Timea Babos of Hungary and Kristina Mladenovic of France became the first players from their respective countries to lift the Australian Open women's doubles crown.