Federer defeats practice partner Dolgopolov at Australian Open

Roger Federer set his sights on erasing his shock defeat in last year's Australian Open third round as he eased past Alexandr Dolgopolov and into the last 32 on Wednesday. The 17-time Grand Slam record-holder was never in trouble against his Ukrainian practice partner in a clinical 6-3, 7-5, 6-1 win in one hour 33 minutes on Rod Laver Arena. With his great rival Rafael Nadal out in the first round, the Swiss great has now reached the third round in all 17 of his appearances at Melbourne Park. But after last year's campaign ended at this stage with a stunning defeat to Italy's Andreas Seppi, third-ranked Federer hopes to avoid another upset this time around. "It's the least I expect to be in the third round of a Slam, obviously, so I'm pumped up, playing well, feeling good," Federer said. "But there's always a danger, you know. Like last year the third round was the end for me, so I hope to go further this time." Federer's loss to Seppi condemned him to his earliest exit from the season's first Grand Slam in 14 years. He will face either Bulgarian 27th seed Grigor Dimitrov or Argentina's Marco Trungelliti in Friday's third round. The 34-year-old Federer's 299th Grand Slam singles victory came as he chases his fifth Australian crown. - Hard yards - Wednesday's win came off the back of an impregnable serve. While he broke Dolgopolov's serve five times, he did not face a single break point on his own serve and hammered 25 aces. "I thought today I did serve very well. Maybe it just matched up well, maybe Dolgopolov wasn't seeing it as well," Federer said. "But also conditions are fast during the daytime, so that helps to be able to serve through opponents. It's also harder to return, clearly. "I'm happy I got the crucial first break in the first set. I think it was a big set for me. Then second set was the key, because it was close for a while." Federer said he was also working on his defensive game under the guidance of new coach and former world number three Ivan Ljubicic, who arrives following the departure of Stefan Edberg. "I did put in the hard yards in the off season, but then again, I like to work on my strength most of the time," he said. "The offensive part of my game, serve and volley, taking the forehand early, using my backhand as a variation. "But, of course, the defensive part is the base. You also need to have that to be able to play the transition game, which I have played so well throughout my career. "To go from defence to offence in the blink of an eye, it's something I did so well for so many years." Federer practised with the pony-tailed Dolgopolov in Dubai during the off-season and took his record over him to 3-0. "I'm a big fan of Alex's game. He's explosive, got a great return, especially on the second serve," the Swiss said. "He's got all the shots. Just for him, managing how to use what at what time."