ATP Finals: Rafael Nadal beaten by David Goffin, Grigor Dimitrov beats Dominic Thiem
ATP Finals | |
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Venue: The 02 Arena, London Dates: 12-19 November | |
Coverage: Watch live on BBC Two, Red Button, BBC Sport website and mobile app, listen on BBC Radio 5 live sports extra and follow text updates online. |
Belgian seventh seed David Goffin upset world number one Rafael Nadal on day two at the ATP Finals in London.
Goffin, who made his debut in 2016 as an injury replacement, won 7-6 (7-5) 6-7 (4-7) 6-4 in his first match as an official qualifier at the tour finale.
Nadal said before the tournament his knee was “not perfect” but he fought hard against an impressive Goffin.
Grigor Dimitrov earlier beat Dominic Thiem 6-3 5-7 7-5 in the opening round-robin match in the Pete Sampras Group.
The Bulgarian sixth seed admitted he had felt “pretty nervous” after seeing off Austrian fourth seed Thiem in three dramatic sets on his ATP Finals debut.
Roger Federer and Alexander Zverev won the opening matches in the Boris Becker Group on Sunday.
The pair will meet in Tuesday’s second singles match at 20:00 GMT, after Marin Cilic plays Jack Sock at 14:00.
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- ATP Finals – BBC TV and radio coverage
‘Rafa is one of the strongest mentally’ – Goffin
Nadal, 31, had been determined to try and compete in London despite a knee injury that saw him pull out of the Paris Masters, but the Spaniard was clearly struggling in the closing stages against Goffin.
The Belgian made most of the running, with his effortless backhand down the line the decisive shot, but double faults at key times betrayed the nerves he felt trying to claim a first win over the 16-time Grand Slam champion.
Nadal was not at his best but his competitive spirit almost carried him through as he converted all four break points that came his way, while saving eight of 13 on his own serve.
After twice seeing leads disappear in the first set, Goffin edged the tie-break and appeared to be heading for victory with a break for 5-3 in the second.
However, a sixth double fault of the day saw him hand back the advantage, and Nadal then played his best tennis of the night to roar back from 0-40 in the next game and race through a second tie-break.
With two hours on the clock, a gripping final set loomed, but Nadal was visibly wincing early in the decider and Goffin moved into a 4-1 lead.
Still Nadal refused to submit, clawing his way back to 4-3 down as coaches Carlos Moya and Toni Nadal watched with concern from the sidelines, but at the second time of asking – and on his fifth match point – Goffin finally sealed victory with an ace.
“It was a tough fight until the end. Rafa is one of the strongest players mentally on the tour,” said Goffin.
“I am so happy to finally find the key to win this match. It is so special to do it here.
“I don’t know how I picked myself up after losing the four match points. I had no regrets and I just wanted to keep going and try to enjoy every point.”
Analysis
Miles MacLagan, former coach of Andy Murray, on 5 live sports extra
“Nadal is not here to take part, he wants to add this title. He’s a competitive player, he enjoys being amongst it.
“He has an injury I’m sure he’s been told won’t get any worse in the long term; I hope we see him again here this week but this a problem that’s clearly been there a long time and won’t clear up in two days.”
‘I was pretty nervous’ – Dimitrov
Dimitrov, 26, just about held his nerve to win a gripping battle of the one-handed backhands against Thiem, who is playing in the Finals for the second year running.
It was the Bulgarian who had the edge for most of the contest, breaking serve once to win the first set and not facing a break point until the end of the second.
However, Thiem took his chance in the 12th game to draw level and force a third set, before breaking back when Dimitrov served for the match at 5-4 in the decider.
Dimitrov missed a chance to earn two match points when he failed to challenge a ball that had missed the baseline, but the former junior Wimbledon champion recovered his poise to break for a third time in game 11, eventually converting his third match point after two hours and 19 minutes.
“I’m not going to lie – I was pretty nervous, my first match out here,” said Dimitrov.
“I’m just very grateful to win that match, especially in that manner. It’s never easy to come out here and play for the first time.”
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