Milos Raonic made Roger Federer feel his age yesterday as the Canadian sharp-shooter bombarded Centre Court with a succession of 140 mph missiles to flatten the seven-times champion and reach his first grand slam final in five gripping sets.

Raonic appeared to be down and out as he trailed Federer by two-sets to one and 15-40 in the fifth game of the fourth set but somehow he managed to cling on for a 6-3 6-7(3) 4-6 7-5 6-3 win and became the first Canadian man to reach a major final.

His opponent in tomorrow’s final is Briton Andy Murray who brushed aside Tomas Berdych, of the Czech Republic 6-3 6-3 6-3.

“It’s an incredible comeback for me. I was struggling throughout the third and fourth sets, he was playing some really good tennis and just on a little opening I managed to turn it around and finish it off in a great match,” said the sixth seed.

“It’s a great feeling.”

Raonic appeared to be heading for a second semi-final defeat in three years against Federer but kept his wits about him to stay alive. After saving two break points in the fifth game he managed to save a third in the ninth game as his thunderbolt serve got him out of trouble again.

The contest appeared to be heading for a fourth set tiebreak as Federer moved to 40-0 in the 12th game but two days after the Swiss boldly stated that “my second serve has always been there for me... it never lets me down”– guess what? It let him down.

Two successive double faults brought Raonic to deuce and while Federer saved two set points – with an unreturnable serve and a volley winner – his luck ran out on the third.

A blazing backhand passing shot winner had Raonic pumping his fists towards his support box as a shell-shocked Federer was left to wonder just how he had let that set get away from him.

The third seed, who was about to contest his 10th set in three days, called on the trainer to massage his aching limbs back to life but it was the mental scars that could not be rubbed away.

Four games into the final set, with the score at deuce, Federer lunged after a flying forehand winner from Raonic and found himself sprawled face down on his beloved turf.

The Swiss managed to save that break point but Raonic refused to let him off the hook and four points later the Canadian had the break for 3-1 as he ended a dazzling net exchange with a rasping crosscourt passing shot.

From them on there only seemed to be one winner and, after firing down 23 aces, with his fastest serve being clocked at 144 mph, Raonic bagged a place in the final when Federer floated a tired forehand long to end the three hours 25 minutes contest.

Berdych tormented

Murray tormented Berdych to reach his third Wimbledon final.

The second seed was totally dominant in the early-evening sunshine on Centre Court, ruthlessly dispatching the burly Czech who never threatened to stop the Murray bandwagon.

The Scot’s only brief wobble came early on when he dropped serve in the third game, having broken in the game before.

Some poor errors from Berdych gifted Murray another break, though, and the 29-year-old pocketed the first set.

A flat atmosphere livened up when Murray flirted with danger at 2-3 in the second set, brilliantly saving two break points.

From then on it was a one-sided procession as Murray broke 10th seed Berdych twice in a row to move two sets clear and again early in the third as he closed in on his 11th grand slam final, one more than Fred Perry.

Sign up to our free newsletters

Get the best updates straight to your inbox:
Please select at least one mailing list.

You can unsubscribe at any time by clicking the link in the footer of our emails. We use Mailchimp as our marketing platform. By subscribing, you acknowledge that your information will be transferred to Mailchimp for processing.