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5 Things We Learned At The 2017 Australian Open

  • Posted: Jan 29, 2017

5 Things We Learned At The 2017 Australian Open

We look into five storylines that emerged during the season’s first Grand Slam

ATPWorldTour.com reflects on the Melbourne fortnight

1. ROGER AND RAFA AREN’T DONE YET

With Rafael Nadal’s ongoing wrist issues causing him to cut this past season short in October, and Roger Federer sitting out after Wimbledon to continue rehabbing following knee surgery, some critics wondered if their bodies could withstand the rigours of professional tennis. Those doubts were swiftly erased by both players with their form this tournament.

Federer and Nadal recaptured the level of tennis that has brought them countless titles throughout their careers, firing winners at will and tracking down shots that seemed impossible to reach. Perhaps most importantly, they showed no issues with fitness or stamina, prevailing in a pair of five-set matches en route to the final before producing their own epic five-set classic in the championship match. With both players now back inside the Top 10 of the Emirates ATP Rankings, it’s possible they could both be challenging for the top spot by the end of the season. Federer and Nadal are also hoping their strong start to the year will aid in a return to the ATP Finals in London.

2. THE ZVEREV BROTHERS ARE PRIMED FOR SUCCESS

Alexander Zverev and Mischa Zverev both enjoyed outstanding results this fortnight, but their paths to success in Melbourne have been radically different. Alexander is one of the emerging #NextGenATP stars and appears destined for greatness. The No. 24 seed gave Nadal all he could handle in the third round before the Spaniard prevailed in a marathon five-set match, but gained plenty of fans with his aggressive baseline play and ability to work a crowd.

Meanwhile, 29-year-old Mischa has endured a laundry list of injuries that saw him outside of the Top 1,000 of the Emirates ATP Rankings in 2015. But after revitalizing his career and re-entering the Top 60 this past season, he captivated fans this tournament with a magical run to the quarter-finals that included a win over World No. 1 Andy Murray. His vintage serve-and-volley tactics delighted fans and proved that as long as he can continue to remain healthy, he can do plenty of damage on the ATP World Tour.

Watch: Zverev’s Comeback Story

3. THE DEPTH IN MEN’S TENNIS IS AT AN ALL-TIME HIGH

The days where the top two seeds could be penciled in for major titles are long gone. From Denis Istomin’s shocking second-round upset over two-time defending champion and second seed Novak Djokovic, to Zverev’s victory over Murray, unseeded players are proving they’re also capable of making big runs at important tournaments. The trend even extended to doubles, with Aussie wild cards Marc Polmans/Andrew Whittington reaching the semi-finals.

Watch: Istomin Reacts To Victory Over Djokovic

4. MURRAY, DJOKOVIC NO. 1 BATTLE PUT ON HOLD (FOR NOW)

Although Murray was disappointed with his early exit in Melbourne, he maintained his No. 1 standing by still advancing farther in the tournament than Djokovic. The Brit has minimal points to defend over the next two months, while Djokovic will defend ATP World Tour Masters 1000 titles in Indian Wells and Miami. Should there be a change in the top spot, it wouldn’t happen until the clay-court season at the earliest.

5. NEXT GEN ATP STARS ANNOUNCE THEIR ARRIVAL

Zverev wasn’t the only #NextGenATP star to make his presence felt this tournament, with several other emerging stars also producing solid tennis over the past two weeks. Among them are Ernesto Escobedo, Noah Rubin, Andrey Rublev, Frances Tiafoe and Alexander Bublik, who all came through qualifying and won their first-round matches in the main draw. Bublik recorded the biggest upset over No. 16 seed Lucas Pouille. Another honorable mention goes to a future #NextGenATP star in 17-year-old Aussie Alex De Minaur, who saved a match point in winning his opening round five-set battle over Gerald Melzer. 

Watch: Bublik Is King Of Tricks

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Roger Revels In 'Beautiful' Moment

  • Posted: Jan 29, 2017

Roger Revels In 'Beautiful' Moment

Swiss wins his first Grand Slam title since 2012 Wimbledon

The talk of history could wait for Roger Federer.

Hours after the Swiss had won his 18th Grand Slam title, padding his own record, the 35 year old wasn’t interested in discussing what it meant to add another victory to his historic tally and increase the distance between he and Rafael Nadal and Pete Sampras, both of whom have 14 Grand Slam crowns.

Instead, Federer was more interested in talking about what had just happened on Rod Laver Arena. “For me it’s all about the comeback, about an epic match with Rafa again. Doing it here in Australia, that I’m so thankful to Peter Carter and Tony Roche, and just people… My popularity here, their support, that I can still do it at my age after not having won a slam for almost five years. That’s what I see,” Federer said. “The last problem is the slam count. Honestly, it doesn’t matter.”

It was a match cherished by all Federer fans, no doubt, but by all tennis fans as well: Two of the all-time greats battling for more than three and a half hours for the Australian Open title, the first Grand Slam of the season. Last November, the two were in the same position as well, except resting. Federer sat in Switzerland, rehabbing his left knee. Nadal was in Spain, undergoing the same delicate process for his left wrist.

You May Also Like: Federer Tops Nadal In Epic For 18th Major Crown

For both men, it had also been more than a year since they had last played for a Grand Slam title: Federer, 2015 US Open, which he lost; and Nadal, 2014 Roland Garros, which he won. The wait made the win that much more meaningful for Federer.

“The magnitude of this match is going to feel different. I can’t compare this one to any other one except for maybe [2009 Roland Garros],” said Federer, who won the Paris title after three consecutive runner-up finishes in 2006-08. “ I waited for the French Open, I tried, I fought. I tried again and failed. Eventually I made it. This feels similar.”

The Melbourne title was also Federer’s first Grand Slam title with coach Ivan Ljubicic. “It’s obviously special for the entire team. It was [Ljubicic’s] first Grand Slam final as a player or as a coach. Obviously he was nervous all day. I tried to calm him down,” Federer said, smiling. “The same thing with my physio, too. I think I can sense that this is not something that he’s seen so many times. Whereas Severin [Luthi, Federer’s other coach], he was totally relaxed about it.

“It’s beautiful for all of us. I know how happy they are because they are more than just a coach or a physio or whatever. They’re all my friends. So we spent a lot of time talking about am I going to get back to 100 per cent, and if I did, what would it require to win a Grand Slam. Now we made it. We’re going to be partying like rock stars tonight. I can tell you that.”

The team all contributed to the win, too, Federer’s 18th and one of his most memorable yet. “I told myself to play free. That’s what we discussed with Ivan and Severin before the matches. You play the ball, you don’t play the opponent. Be free in your head, be free in your shots, go for it. The brave will be rewarded here. I didn’t want to go down just making shots, seeing forehands rain down on me from Rafa. I think it was the right decision at the right time,” Federer said. “I had opportunities early on in the fifth, as well, to get back on even terms. I could have been left disappointed there and accepted that fact. I kept on fighting. I kept on believing, like I did all match long today, that there was a possibility I could win this match.”

Read More: Nadal: ‘Playing Like This, Good Things Can Happen’

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Nadal: "Playing Like This, Good Things Can Happen"

  • Posted: Jan 29, 2017

Nadal: "Playing Like This, Good Things Can Happen"

Spaniard reflects on run at Melbourne Park

It was a rivalry renewed for the 35th time and it more than lived up to the hype and expectations. Roger Federer edged Rafael Nadal in a rollercoaster five-set thriller for the Australian Open crown on Sunday, prevailing 6-4, 3-6, 6-1, 3-6, 6-3 in three hours and 37 minutes.

The victory was sweet for Federer, claiming another slice of history with an unprecedented 18th major title. For Nadal, his own opportunity to surge into the record books was denied.

The Spaniard was bidding to become the first player in the Open Era to capture all four Grand Slam titles on multiple occasions. But, speaking to the assembled media following the match, Nadal refused to view the defeat in a negative light. After concluding his 2016 ATP World Tour campaign early due to a wrist injury, he believes that the final run in Melbourne will propel him to even greater things in 2017.

“I feel happy,” Nadal said. “I played a great quality of tennis during the whole month [in Brisbane and Melbourne]. That’s great news for me. The only goal for me is keep going. I believe that if I have my body in the right conditions, I can have a great year because I feel that I am playing well.

“I cannot predict what’s going on in the future. That’s always the same thing. I just think that I am playing well. I worked hard to be where I am. I believe that playing like this, good things can happen. It can happen here on this surface. If I am able to play like this, to have matches like I did the other day, and recover well as I recovered, then the opponents don’t get that many free points and I am playing solid from the baseline. If I made that happen, I think I can keep having success on hard courts, but on clay can be special.”

You May Also Like: Federer Tops Nadal In Epic For 18th Major Crown

Nadal has many positives to take from a strong start to the season. The Spaniard entered Melbourne Park after a quarter-final finish at the Brisbane International presented by Suncorp and proceeded to kick his game into another gear.

A pair of straight-set victories over former Top 20 players Florian Mayer and Marcos Baghdatis was followed by a gritty, five-set triumph over #NextGenATP star and 24th seed Alexander Zverev. Nadal rallied from a two-sets-to-one deficit to reach the Round of 16 and he was not done there. The Mallorca native recorded consecutive Top 10 wins on a hard court for the first time since the 2015 ATP Finals, downing Gael Monfils and Milos Raonic, before edging a resurgent Grigor Dimitrov in a pulsating semi-final encounter.

Nadal admits that reaching his first final in nearly 10 months has provided much-needed confidence in his game. Belief in his abilities at this stage of his career is paramount.

“Being honest, last year I felt great coming here, but not as well as this year,” Nadal added. “I felt great. But I lost in the first round. This year I won an important match against Zverev in the third round. That’s important. I won great matches against great players.

“I competed well against everybody. That’s the most important thing for me. That makes me feel happy. Of course, winning an event like this is so important. For me, if I won that one, it would have been amazing. But the real thing is what makes me more happy, more than the titles, is going on the court and feeling that I can enjoy the sport.

“Today I am enjoying the sport. Last year I only had the chance to enjoy the sport between Indian Wells and Madrid, because in Madrid I got injured in the quarter-finals. That’s the real feeling.

“At this moment in my career, more than titles, for sure if I am playing well, I believe that I am going to win titles. More than all these kinds of things is being healthy enough to work the way I need to work, to fight for the things I want to fight for. I’m going to keep trying to do that and to work the same way.”

Nadal is scheduled to resume his 2017 ATP World Tour campaign next month at the 500 events in Rotterdam and Acapulco. He is making his first appearance at the ABN AMRO World Tennis Tournament since 2009, where he continues his quest for his first hard-court crown since Doha 2014, and will be seeking a third title at the Abierto Mexicano Telcel, taking part in the Latin American Golden Swing for the fifth straight year. 

“I said before the tournament started that I felt that I was practising great. Then you need to do it in the matches and I did. I have great satisfaction. I cannot say that I am sad. I wanted to win, yes, but I am not very sad. I did all the things that I could. I worked a lot during all these months. I kept working and I competed well.

“I enjoyed the competition. I won against the best players in the world, and I competed well against everybody. That’s the most important thing for me and that gives me confidence to keep playing and that’s what I’m going to try.”

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Roger & Rafa: Every Match Ever Played

  • Posted: Jan 29, 2017

Rafa & Roger Resume Rivalry In Final

A recap of every match between Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal…

One of the greatest rivalries in the history of tennis will add a 35th chapter in Sunday’s Australian Open final when Rafael Nadal and Roger Federer battle for the first major title of 2017. The players have won a combined 31 Grand Slam titles but Nadal last triumphed at Roland Garros in 2014 and Federer has not held a major since Wimbledon 2012. Federer is seeking to extend his all-time record-haul to 18, while Nadal is hoping to move into outright second position all time with a 15th major.

Nadal leads the FedEx ATP Head2Head series 23-11 and holds a 9-7 edge on hard courts. When the players last met more than a year ago in the 2015 final of the Swiss Indoor Basel, Federer’s three-set win elevated his record in hard-court finals against Nadal to 3-2, adding to his victories at the 2010 ATP Finals and the 2005 Miami Open. The Basel result snapped Nadal’s five-match winning streak against the Swiss.

Nadal has won all three meetings with Federer at the Australian Open, taking semi-final victories in 2014 and 2012 and their five-set epic in the 2009 final.

Here is an in-depth look at all of their previous clashes.

2015 Swiss Indoors Basel final, Basel, hard, Federer d. Nadal 63 57 63
The long wait for one of the greatest rivalries of all time to be renewed finally ended, with Federer and Nadal drawn to clash for the ATP World Tour 500 series title in Basel. It had been 21 months since they last faced off on the hard courts of the Australian Open and both competitors were eager to notch another victory in the clash of titans. After more than two hours on court, it was Federer who claimed his sixth title of the season, seventh in his hometown and 88th of his career, clawing past his rival in a high-octane affair.

Predicated on an attacking mentality, both players looked to open the court and keep rallies short throughout. After splitting the first two sets, a Nadal double fault in the third game of the decider would give Federer a break chance to claim a potentially decisive break, but the Spaniard dispelled any such notion. He would win the battle, but the Swiss would win the war, grabbing the decisive break for 5-3 and serving it out a game later after two hours and three minutes on court. The former Basel ballboy out-aced Nadal 12-0 and struck 44 total winners. He converted on three of seven break points.

2014 Australian Open semi-final, Melbourne, hard, Nadal d. Federer 76(4) 63 63
Nadal and Federer had met on the same court exactly two years ago, when Nadal prevailed in four sets before losing out to Novak Djokovic in a near-six-hour finale. As they returned to Rod Laver Arena, it was with renewed hope for Federer that he might get his first Grand Slam win over Nadal since the 2007 Wimbledon final.

With Stefan Edberg in his corner and a larger racquet head paying dividends, Federer came into the semi-finals feeling confident on the back of impressive victories over Jo-Wilfried Tsonga and Andy Murray. With Nadal also struggling with a troublesome blister on his left palm, would this be Federer’s chance to reach his 25th major final?

In short, no. Nadal produced an awesome display, punctuated with remarkable passing shots, to which Federer had no answer. While Nadal excelled, he needed to, to combat the high level of aggression from Federer. The Swiss did not relent in coming to the net, despite often being thwarted by Nadal’s passing shots, and stepped in to hit over his backhand returns, instead of slicing them all.

But with Nadal looking to chase down Federer’s tally of 17 major titles, the Spaniard afforded Federer no mercy as he claimed the victory in two hours and 23 minutes, setting a final clash with Stanislas Wawrinka.

2013 Barclays ATP World Tour Finals semi-final, London, indoor hard, Nadal d. Federer 75 63
Federer had won all four of their previous encounters at the season finale, most recently in the 2010 title match at The O2, but Nadal defeated the six-time champion in straight sets to reach his 14th final of a remarkable year.

After three straight service breaks, Nadal closed out a hold to love with his eighth forehand winner to end the 43-minute first set. Federer, who needed to be aggressive, struck 11 winners and committed 15 unforced errors in a high-quality opener. In the second set, Federer committed a forehand error in the fifth game to give Nadal the break. Nadal tightened up his game and at 5-3, created one match point opportunity at 30/40. Federer serve and volleyed, but Nadal’s backhand return was low enough to get Federer into trouble. He hit a backhand volley long to end the 80-minute encounter.

2013 Western & Southern Open quarter-final, Cincinnati, hard, Nadal d. Federer 57 64 63
In arguably their most riveting encounter since their 2012 Australian Open semi-final, Nadal outlasted Federer after three sets of high quality tennis. The Spaniard needed five match points to close out the 32-year-old Swiss, extending his winning streak on hard courts in 2013 to 13-0 and moving one step closer to a 37th ATP World Tour Masters 1000 final.

Federer executed a highly aggressive game plan early on, which included topping many backhand returns and attacking the net with authority. He would capture the first set on a late break at 5-5 30/40, but Nadal would refuse to succumb to his rival, turning the tables late in the second set. As Federer’s unforced error count rose to 44, Nadal continued to apply pressure on his serve with deep angled returns with significant pace. The World No. 3 took an immediate lead in the third set, breaking for 2-0 and holding serve from there to the finish line. In a dramatic final game, Federer rallied from 0/40 and eventually saved four match points before Nadal rifled a forehand down the line to close it out.

Nadal improved to an overall record of 21-10 against Federer with the win, ending the five-time Cincinnati champ’s bid to repeat.

Federer vs Nadal:
Matches 21-30 | Matches 11-20 | Matches 1-10

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Social Reacts To Federer's Triumph

  • Posted: Jan 29, 2017

Social Reacts To Federer's Triumph

Swiss claims 18th Grand Slam title at Australian Open

Tennis fans, media and players worldwide were gripped as the 35th installment of the Roger Federer – Rafael Nadal rivalry saw the pair face off in a classic five-set battle in the Australian Open final on Sunday evening. See how they reacted on social media to what immediately became a trending storyline around the world.

You May Also Like: Federer Tops Nadal In Epic For 18th Major Crown

Worldwide Trending

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Social Reaction

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And the final word from Roger Federer…

Moet and Chandon off-court news 

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Federer Tops Nadal In Epic For 18th Major Crown

  • Posted: Jan 29, 2017

Federer Tops Nadal In Epic For 18th Major Crown

Federer wins fifth Australian Open crown

He’s been a man on a mission in Melbourne the past two weeks and the dream came true for Roger Federer on Sunday evening as he toppled his great rival, Rafael Nadal, 6-4, 3-6, 6-1, 3-6, 6-3 in the Australian Open final to win his 18th Grand Slam championship.

“I’m out of words,” said Federer, after receiving the trophy from Rod Laver. “I’d like to congratulate Rafa on an amazing comeback. There are no draws in tennis, but I would have been very happy to accept one and share it with Rafa tonight. The comeback had been perfect as it was,” said the Swiss, who was playing his first tour-level event after a six-month injury lay-off.

All out aggression from Federer proved decisive as he defeated Nadal in a Grand Slam final for just the third time in nine contests. He had lost all three previous battles with the Spaniard at Melbourne Park – including a heartbreaker in the 2009 final – and had not beaten Nadal in a major since 2007. But Federer righted those wrongs with a sublime display on Rod Laver Arena Sunday night, marking his 100th match at the Australian Open in style.

It was an iconic contest and it deserved five sets as Federer prevailed in three hours and 37 minutes in an electric atmosphere on Rod Laver Arena, rallying from a break down in the fifth set to win the last five games. The tears of joy flowed freely for Federer as the electronic review ruled his forehand winner on match point to have caught the line.

You May Also Like: How It Happened: Federer Beats Nadal For Australian Open Title

 

 

It is Federer’s first major title in almost five years, since defeating Andy Murray in the 2012 Wimbledon final. Since then, the Swiss has been forced to watch Novak Djokovic largely dominate the Grand Slams, losing to the Serbian in the 2014 Wimbledon title match and in 2015 in the Wimbledon and US Open finals.

It was remarkable feat for Federer and Nadal to meet across the net in another Grand Slam final – and their 35th battle overall. After their semi-final wins – five-setters against Stan Wawrinka and Grigor Dimitrov respectively – they both told the story of being too hobbled to play an exhibition match at the opening of Nadal’s academy in Manacor in October, making do instead with sponge balls against junior players.

But sheer will and hard work saw them both find their best level and rise to the occasion in Melbourne, taking advantage of shock week one defeats for Novak Djokovic and Andy Murray – to Denis Istomin and Mischa Zverev – to bring about a nostalgic final for tennis enthusiasts.

Indeed, it was only the fifth occasion in the Open Era that a Grand Slam final has been contested by a pair of 30-somethings. The last time it happened was at the 2002 US Open, when 31-year-old Pete Sampras defeated 32-year-old Andre Agassi to win the title in what would be his final ever match.

At 35 years and 174 days, Federer is the oldest Grand Slam champion since Ken Rosewall, who won three major titles in 1970 and ’71 after celebrating his 35th birthday. But it must have seemed a long way off for the Basel native last July, when he was forced to announce that he would be missing the remainder of the 2016 season in order to fully repair his body after undergoing arthroscopic left knee surgery in February.

With wins over Tomas Berdych, Kei Nishikori and Wawrinka to reach the final, Federer is the second player – after Mats Wilander at 1982 Roland Garros – to win four Top 10 matches en route to a Grand Slam title in the Emirates ATP Rankings Era (since 1973). He is also the first player to win three five-setters en route to a Grand Slam title since Gaston Gaudio at Roland Garros 2004.

He is the third man in history to win five Australian Open titles, adding to his victories in 2004 (d. Safin), 2006 (d. Baghdatis), 2007 (d. Gonzalez) and 2010 (d. Murray). At No. 17 in the Emirates ATP Rankings, he is the lowest ranked Australian Open champion since No. 18 Thomas Johansson won the title in 2002.

But the Swiss right-hander, who spent 302 weeks atop the rankings, is now set to return to the Top 10 at No. 10 on Monday.

For Nadal, he has come a long way from crying in the car on the way back to the hotel after injury forced him out of Roland Garros before he could step on court for his third-round match. He would later call on his 2016 campaign after a second-round defeat in Shanghai in October, not able to continue any more with his wrist the way it was.  

The Spanish left-hander is now set to rise to No. 6 in the Emirates ATP Rankings after returning to his best to reach his 21st Grand Slam final (14-7 record). 

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Australian Open: Roger Federer thrilled by Grand Slam win over Rafael Nadal

  • Posted: Jan 29, 2017

Roger Federer said he enjoyed proving he could still win a Grand Slam more than taking his tally to 18 with a dramatic Australian Open victory over Rafael Nadal.

The Swiss, 35, won 6-4 3-6 6-1 3-6 6-3 to claim his fifth Melbourne title.

“For me it’s all about the comeback, about an epic match with Rafa again,” he said. “The last problem is the Slam count. Honestly, it doesn’t matter.

“We’re going to party like rock stars tonight. I can tell you that.”

Five years after his last major victory at Wimbledon, and 10 years since he beat Nadal in a Grand Slam final, Federer finally clinched title number 18 with a thrilling five-set victory.

The victory came in his first tournament back following six months out with a knee injury, which he picked up when running a bath for his children at last year’s Australian Open.

Men’s all-time Grand Slam singles titles leaders
18 (2003-present) – Roger Federer (Swi) 12 (1961-1967) – Roy Emerson (Aus)
14 (2005-present) – Rafael Nadal (Spa) 11 (1974-1981) – Bjorn Borg (Swe)
14 (1990-2002) – Pete Sampras (US) 11 (1960-1969) – Rod Laver (Aus)
12 (2008-present) – Novak Djokovic (Ser) 10 (1920-1930) – Bill Tilden (US)

It appeared as though another Grand Slam opportunity was slipping away when Nadal took the fourth set and then moved 3-1 up in the decider.

However, Federer came storming back with five games in a row and a brilliant display of attacking tennis.

“I told myself to play free,” he said.

“That’s what we discussed with [coaches] Ivan [Ljubicic] and Severin [Luthi] before the matches. You play the ball, you don’t play the opponent.

“Be free in your head, be free in your shots, go for it. The brave will be rewarded here. I didn’t want to go down just making shots, seeing forehands rain down on me from Rafa. I think it was the right decision at the right time.”

The victory makes Federer the first man to win three of the four Grand Slam titles at least five times each – but it was his lone victory at the French Open in 2009 that was in his thoughts on Sunday.

“I can’t compare this one to any other one except for maybe the French Open in ’09,” he said.

“I waited for the French Open, I tried, I fought. I tried again and failed. Eventually I made it. This feels similar.”

Federer rejects Cash criticism

Federer took a medical time-out after the fourth set for the second match running, and then had treatment to his thigh from the physio during the fifth set – something that infuriated former Wimbledon champion Pat Cash.

Speaking on BBC Radio 5 live, the Australian said: “You don’t just stop a marathon if you’re tired. Is it something that really requires medical attention, or is it tiredness? If it’s tiredness then it’s a loss of condition.

“I cannot stress how bad this has been supervised or looked at by the medical team here in the whole tour. It’s wrong, wrong and wrong. It’s cheating and it’s being allowed. It’s legal cheating but it’s still not right.”

Asked about the comments after the match, Federer responded: “I felt my quad midway through the second set already, and the groin started to hurt midway through the third set. I just told myself: ‘The rules are there that you can use them.’

“I also think we shouldn’t be using these rules or abusing the system. I think I’ve led the way for 20 years.

“So I think to be critical there is exaggerating. I’m the last guy to call a medical time-out. So I don’t know what he’s talking about.”

Clay-court season can be special – Nadal

Despite letting a lead slip in the fifth set, Nadal remained positive at the end of two weeks in Melbourne that have seen him re-establish himself among the Grand Slam contenders.

Heading into the tournament he had not won a major since the 2014 French Open – the last time he had been past the quarter-final stage at a Grand Slam.

“At the end of the day it’s another title – there is a winner, there is a loser,” said the Spaniard.

“In these kind of matches, anyone can win. Being honest, in these kind of matches, I won a lot of times against him. Today he beat me. I just congratulate him.

“It’s not more than another important title for him, another important two weeks for me. Even if it didn’t finish the way that I wanted, it’s been an important two weeks for me.

“The only thing that I can do is congratulate him and go back home with very positive feelings for me.”

And the nine-time French Open champion is confident that his success on hard courts bodes well for a return to his beloved clay in the spring.

“On clay I recover better than here, then the opponents don’t get that many free points, and I am playing solid from the baseline,” said Nadal.

“If I make that happen, I think I can keep having success in hard courts, but on clay can be special.”

Analysis

Russell Fuller, BBC tennis correspondent:

Boris Becker and Michael Chang were both 17 when they won Wimbledon and the French Open in the 1980s. Pete Sampras’ final Grand Slam at the 2002 US Open had seemed beyond his reach, and Goran Ivanisevic’s 2001 Wimbledon triumph as a wildcard was another magical moment. But, for me, Federer’s victory here in Melbourne is the greatest of all triumphs in the history of the men’s game.

Federer won the title in his first competitive tournament for six months. At the age of 35, he won three five-set matches: two against top-five players, and the third in the final against a man he had not beaten in a Grand Slam since the Wimbledon final of 2007.

Federer’s 18th Grand Slam title is likely to ensure he has a record which neither Nadal nor Novak Djokovic can break. And 12 months after leaving Melbourne with a torn meniscus in his knee, Federer looks as likely as anyone to win another Grand Slam in 2017.

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