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Dominic Thiem Withdraws From Cordoba

  • Posted: Jan 31, 2022

Austrian star Dominic Thiem has withdrawn from the Cordoba Open due to a hand injury.

“In the last days, I suffered a minor injury between my knuckles, a little strain of my ligaments. The positive thing is the wrist is perfectly fine, but I’m suffering pain in my hand and also lacking practice, so I have to pull out,” Thiem said. “I’m very sad, but I’m going to come back once I’m 100 per cent fit, and thank you so much for the great and warm welcome I had here in Cordoba.”

The former World No. 3 has not competed since suffering a tear in his right wrist at the Mallorca Championships last June. He arrived in Cordoba, where he trained before deciding to withdraw from the ATP 250 clay-court event.

Thiem, who was the second seed, was scheduled to play Argentine wild card Tomas Martin Etcheverry or Chilean qualifier Nicolas Jarry in the second round. He will be replaced in the draw by a lucky loser.

Thiem is a 17-time tour-level champion, who lifted his first ATP Masters 1000 trophy at the 2019 BNP Paribas Open and his maiden Grand Slam trophy at the 2020 US Open. He is currently No. 37 in the ATP Rankings.

 

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Berrettini Rises To Career-High, Mover Of Week

  • Posted: Jan 31, 2022

No. 6 Matteo Berrettini, +2 (Career High)
The 25-year-old has climbed one spot to a career-high No. 6 in the ATP Rankings after he reached the semi-finals at the Australian Open for the first time. The Italian earned victories over Top 20 pair Gael Monfils and Pablo Carreno Busta, while he also survived an attacking bombardment from #NextGenATP Spaniard Carlos Alcaraz in the third round. Read Australian Open Final Report & Watch Highlights

View Latest ATP Rankings

No. 12 Denis Shapovalov, +2
The Canadian has risen two places after he continued his strong start to the season in Melbourne. The 22-year-old, who helped guide Canada to the ATP Cup title at the start of January, shocked World No. 3 Alexander Zverev en route to the quarter-finals at the first major of the year.

No. 16 Gael Monfils, +4
The Frenchman rolled back the years at the Australian Open as he reached the quarter-finals in Melbourne for the first time since 2016. It means the 35-year-old move has moved four places to No. 16 in the ATP Rankings. The 11-time tour-level titlist did not drop a set before he lost to Berrettini in five sets.

No. 29 Carlos Alcaraz, +2 (Career High)
The 18-year-old has soared into the Top 30 of the ATP Rankings for the first time after he advanced to the third round at the Australian Open. The reigning Intesa Next Gen ATP Finals champion defeated Alejandro Tabilo and Dusan Lajovic in his second appearance at Melbourne Park.

No. 33 Alex de Minaur, +9
The Australian had an enjoyable fortnight on home soil, reaching the fourth round at his home Slam for the first time. The 22-year-old, who was making his fifth appearance in Melbourne, earned an impressive victory over #NextGenATP Italian Lorenzo Musetti in the first round, before eventually losing to 20-year-old Jannik Sinner in the fourth round.

Other Notable Top 100 Movers
No. 17 Pablo Carreno Busta, +4
No. 20 Taylor Fritz, +2 (Career High)
No. 22 Daniel Evans, +2 (Joint Career High)
No. 24 Reilly Opelka, +5
No. 25 Grigor Dimitrov, +3
No. 50 Botic van de Zandschulp, +7 (Career High)
No. 58 Adrian Mannarino +11
No. 59 Maxime Cressy, +11 (Career High)
No. 63 Miomir Kecmanovic, +14
No. 73 Pablo Andujar, +10
No. 77 Sebastian Baez, +11 (Career High)
No. 82 Ricardas Berankis, +11
No. 84 Oscar Otte, +12 (Career High)
No. 89 Corentin Moutet, +11
No. 95 Kamil Majchrzak, +12

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Brain Game: How Nadal Powered Up For Record-Breaking Australian Open Title

  • Posted: Jan 31, 2022

The points were going long. Ironically, the match was slipping fast.

Rafael Nadal orchestrated a stunning comeback in the Australian Open final to defeat Daniil Medvedev 2-6, 6-7(5), 6-4, 6-4, 7-5. The match lasted five hours and 24 minutes and finished at 1:11 a.m. Monday morning. Figuring out the winning game plan finally materialised for the Spaniard in the dead of the night.

The length of the rally ended up being the canary in the coal mine for Nadal as you examine his performance throughout the match and the tournament. The average rally of his first six matches en route to the final was a routine 4.05 shots per point. His quarter-final victory over Denis Shapovalov was a brisk 3.11 shots per point, while his victory against Adrian Mannarino in the previous round averaged a crisp 3.55 shots per point. Rafa was clearly reaping the benefits of an attacking game style as he marched through the Melbourne draw on courts that felt liked the ball was “skidding” more than “sitting” after the bounce.

Then Medvedev turned up on the other side of the net and all the attacking went out the window.

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The Russian grounded Nadal’s aggressive game style to a screeching halt in the opening set, with the average rally length skyrocketing to 6.27 shots per point. The longest rally length to the final for Nadal was in the first round, in which he defeated Marcos Giron, averaging 4.75 shots per point.

The first set of the final seemed like the players were hitting in slow motion. Cat and mouse replaced shock and awe for the Spaniard. The slower, longer rallies stalled Nadal’s offence as he coughed up 23 errors to just 10 for Medvedev in the opening stanza. Slower speed. Different height. Reacting rather than playing on the front foot.

Set one was a grind. Set two was even more so, as the average rally length ballooned to 6.83 shots per point. Slice backhands were replacing the typical run-around forehands in the Deuce court for Nadal. A hefty 28 points were played in rallies of nine shots or more in the second set, with Medvedev winning the tie-break 7/5. They were happy to trade blows with a 40-shot rally early in the second set. Extended rallies felt like the new norm.

The deepest hole Nadal found himself in was serving at 0/40 at 2-3 in the third set. He was a heartbeat away from certain peril. Once he doggedly held serve, he started playing with more aggression and looked to force the issue more than wait for Medvedev to hand him an error.

And then the rally length came down, the power went up, and an unlikely victory was born from refusing to call it a day.

Average Rally Length By Set
– 
Set 1 = 6.27 shots
– Set 2 = 6.83 shots
– Set 3 = 5.56 shots
– Set 4 = 5.03 shots
– Set 5 = 4.31 shots

The more Nadal sunk his teeth into the match, the more the average rally length came back to his wheelhouse, not Medvedev’s.

In the deciding fifth set, there were fewer long rallies of at least nine shots compared to any other set.

Rallies Of 9+ Shots By Set
– Set 1 = 15
– Set 2 = 28
– Set 3 = 15
– Set 4 = 12
– Set 5 = 11

One of the greatest tennis strategies of all time is to simply hang around. When things are not going your way, just hang around. Don’t go away. Things change. Seasons change. Night can turn to day. Twenty can turn to 21 if you just hang around long enough to figure out the problem at hand.

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Look Back At Nadal's Four Comebacks From Two Sets Down

  • Posted: Jan 31, 2022

Rafael Nadal’s stunning 2-6, 6-7(5), 6-4, 6-4, 7-5 comeback victory against Daniil Medvedev was not just the first Australian Open final in which the champion rallied from two set down to win since Roy Emerson defeated Fred Stolle in 1965. It was also just the fourth time Nadal has overcome a two-set deficit in his storied career.

The last time Nadal battled from two sets down? Nearly 15 years ago, at Wimbledon in 2007 against Mikhail Youzhny. ATPTour.com looks at the four times the Spaniard has rallied from two sets down.

2005 Madrid Final – Nadal d. Ivan Ljubicic 3-6, 2-6, 6-3, 6-4, 7-6(3)
Entering the 2005 Mutua Madrid Open final, it was no surprise Nadal would have a difficult time with Croatian Ivan Ljubicic. The pair had met twice earlier that year, in Doha and Miami, splitting those meetings.

The task became even more daunting for the home favourite when he won just five games in the first two sets. With Ljubicic firing huge serve after huge serve on the hard court (Madrid transitioned to clay in 2009), Nadal struggled to strike back.

But even at 19, Nadal already had a steely resolve. Despite winning nine fewer points in the match (145-154), the lefty used the support of his home crowd to claw back. Ljubicic struck 32 aces, but it was not enough. Nadal rallied for a 3-6, 2-6, 6-3, 6-4, 7-6(3) victory.

“I think it was very difficult match for sure,” Nadal said. “Two sets to zero down, Ljubicic playing unbelievable. I [was able to] do nothing because he was playing unbelievable. He served very, very good.”

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2006 Wimbledon R2 – Nadal d. Robert Kendrick 6-7(4), 3-6, 7-6(2), 7-5, 6-4
In the second round at Wimbledon less than a year later, Nadal also found himself on the opposite end of the court of a big server in Robert Kendrick. The American did not have the pedigree of Ljubicic, but the No. 237 player in the ATP Rankings had a powerful game to trouble the Spaniard on the grass.

At the time, it was unclear how well Nadal would adapt his game to the slick surface. He had gone 3-2 in his first two appearances at Wimbledon in 2003 and 2005, and at the time the world did not know he would become a two-time champion at the event. Kendrick powered his way to within two points of the biggest victory of his career. But Nadal advanced, defeated Andre Agassi in the next round and eventually reached his first final at The Championships (l. to Federer).

“[It] was very tough. He played a very good match, very complete match,” Nadal said. “I was playing very well. I played with [a] very good attitude all time because [it] was very tough. So I am very happy for the victory.”

Rafael Nadal
Photo Credit: Clive Brunskill/Getty Images
2007 Wimbledon R4 – Nadal d. Mikhail Youzhny 4-6, 3-6, 6-1, 6-2, 6-2
One year on from reaching his first final at Wimbledon, Nadal needed to claw through his third-round clash against Robin Soderling — who later handed him his first Roland Garros loss — in five sets. In the fourth round, things did not get easier for the Spaniard.

Russian Mikhail Youzhny, who was World No. 13 at the time, used his variety to take a two-set lead against the World No. 2. Youzhny had won two of their past three clashes, including a four-setter in the 2006 US Open quarter-finals. But like Nadal did the year before against Kendrick, he found a way to win, converting six of his 10 break points in the match. Nadal went on to reach his second final at the grass-court major (l. to Federer).

“Youzhny was playing very good. I’m feeling [I was] not playing my best. But the truth [is] he played very well. For that reason I couldn’t play very well, too,” Nadal said. “I played [a] little bit defensive. His game is very good for this surface. He played very flat all [the] time, fast. He has one serve, the serve is always going down. [His serve] doesn’t bounce high. Yeah, it’s tough.

“After the first two sets, the next three sets maybe I played my best game on grass in my life.”

2022 Australian Open Final – Nadal d. Daniil Medvedev 2-6, 6-7(5), 6-4, 6-4, 7-5
Nadal downplayed his chances leading into the 2022 Australian Open. After the Citi Open in early August 2021, he missed the rest of the year due to a left foot injury. It would be tough for him to round into form quickly enough for best-of-five tennis against the best players in the world, right?

Wrong.

Nadal was in deep trouble against second seed Daniil Medvedev, the 2021 US Open champion, though. The Russian led 6-2, 7-6(5), 3-2, and held three consecutive break points at 0/40 on Nadal’s serve. But the Spaniard found a way to get out of trouble and raised his level from there.

“In that moment, of course [the] situation [was] critical. But sport is unpredictable,” Nadal said. “If you fight [until] the end, [the] normal thing is [to] lose the match in straight sets after that situation. On the other hand, I had a big chance in the second, too.

“I don’t know. I was repeating to myself during the whole match, I lost a lot of times here having chances, sometimes I was a little bit unlucky. I just wanted to keep believing [until] the end. I just wanted to give myself a chance.”

Nadal did just that. Medvedev steadied himself in the fifth set, leading to a rollercoaster of momentum shifts. Nadal let slip an opportunity to serve for the title at 5-4 in the decider, but broke back in the next game before successfully serving out the match at the second time of asking. The legendary lefty became the first player in the Open Era to rally from two sets down in the Australian Open final.

Nadal/Medvedev
Photo Credit: Clive Brunskill/Getty Images

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Scouting Report: Thiem Returns In Cordoba; Zverev & Karatsev Headline Fields In Montpellier & Pune

  • Posted: Jan 30, 2022

The action on the ATP Tour will be spread across three continents this week, with ATP 250 tournaments taking place in Argentina, France and India.

Dominic Thiem and Diego Schwartzman lead the field at the Cordoba Open, while Alexander Zverev is the top seed at the Open Sud de France in Montpellier. Aslan Karatsev will be targetting his second tour-level title of the season at the Tata Open Maharashtra in Pune.

ATPTour.com looks ahead at 15 things to watch this week.

View Draws: Cordoba | Montpellier | Pune

FIVE THINGS TO WATCH IN CORDOBA
1) Schwartzman Top Seed: Argentine Schwartzman will lead the way as the top seed on home soil in Cordoba, where he reached the final in 2020. The 29-year-old, who defeated Stefanos Tsitsipas at the ATP Cup earlier this month, will be making his fourth appearance at the ATP 250 event and starts against countryman Federico Coria or a qualifier.

2) Thiem Returns: Dominic Thiem has not competed at a tour-level event since Mallorca last June due to a wrist injury he sustained while he was in action on the grass in Spain. The former World No. 3 will make his return on the Argentine clay as he makes his debut at the Cordoba Open. The second seed, who has won 10 tour-level titles on this surface, will play Argentine wild card Tomas Martin Etcheverry or a qualifier in the second round.

3) Clay-Court Standouts: With the ATP Tour returning to clay for the first time this year, there are many stars who flourish on the surface relishing the opportunity. Cristian Garin has won five tour-level titles on clay, including in Cordoba in 2020, while Federico Delbonis captured his two trophies at this level on the surface in Sao Paulo in 2014 and Marrakech in 2016. Spaniard Albert Ramos-Vinolas was a finalist at the event last season and has triumphed at three ATP Tour events in his career on clay. All three are in the field this week.

4) Home Favourites: Alongside Schwartzman and Delbonis, there are six other Argentines in the main draw at the Cordoba Open (this does not include potential qualifiers. Sebastian Baez, Facundo Bagnis, Francisco Cerundolo, Federico Coria, Etcheverry and Juan Ignacio Londero will all be targetting deep runs in front of home support. Londero tasted success at the ATP 250 event in 2019, capturing his maiden tour-level crown at the tournament.

5) Sonego To Go Deep? Lorenzo Sonego is the fourth seed in Cordoba and will look to improve on his 2021 performance at the ATP 250 tournament where he reached the second round. However, the Italian, who advanced to the third round at the Australian Open this month, could face a tricky opening test against #NextGenATP Holger Rune of Denmark in his first match if the 18-year-old can overcome Roberto Carballes Baena.

FIVE THINGS TO WATCH IN MONTPELLIER
1) Zverev In Action: Zverev has fond memories in Montpellier, having won the title in his last appearance at the ATP 250 event in 2017. The World No. 3 is the top seed after receiving a wild card and will be aiming to bounce back from the fourth-round defeat he suffered against Denis Shapovalov at the Australian Open. The German will play 27-year-old Ilya Ivashka or American Mackenzie McDonald in his opening match.

2) Home Favourite Monfils: Gael Monfils arrives in Montpellier full of confidence following his strong start to the season. The Frenchman captured his 11th tour-level title at the Adelaide International 1 earlier this month, before he advanced to the quarter-finals at the Australian Open.

The 35-year-old has lifted the trophy in Montpellier three times (2010, 2014, 2020) and will aim to enjoy another deep run on home soil as the third seed. He will begin his campaign against countryman Corentin Moutet or Swede Mikael Ymer.

3) Can Bautista Agut Go One Step Further? Second seed Roberto Bautista Agut advanced to the final at the ATP 250 indoor-hard event last year, advancing to the championship match without dropping a set. The Spaniard has already earned Top 20 wins against Garin, Casper Ruud and Hubert Hurkcaz this year at the ATP Cup and will look to maintain his good form against Lucas Pouille or a qualifier in his first match.

4) Field Full Of Past Champions: French pair Richard Gasquet and Jo-Wilfried Tsonga have lifted the trophy in Montpellier four times between them, with Gasquet triumphing in 2013, 2015 and 2016, while Tsonga was the victor in 2019. The experienced duo begin against seventh seed Ugo Humbert and a qualifier, respectively.

Meanwhile, David Goffin triumphed at the tournament last year. The eighth seed will play Benjamin Bonzi in the first round on Monday.

5) Herbert/Mahut Top Seeds: Pierre-Hugues Herbert and Nicolas Mahut, the reigning Nitto ATP Finals champions, will play their first tournament of the year as a team in Montpellier. The Frenchmen are the top seeds. Mahut lifted the Montpellier trophy in 2012 alongside countryman Edouard Roger-Vasselin. Three-time champion Roger-Vasselin and Israeli Jonathan Erlich, the third seeds, face a tough opening challenge against Zverev and close friend Marcelo Melo.

FIVE THINGS TO WATCH IN PUNE
1) Karatsev Leads The Field: Aslan Karatsev will aim to win his second tour-level title of the season when he competes in Pune for the first time. The Russian, who triumphed at the Sydney Tennis Classic earlier this month, is the top seed and will open against a qualifier in the second round.

2) Is Musetti Ready To Go Deep? #NextGenATP Italian Lorenzo Musetti will look to continue his good work from last season, where he rose from outside the Top 100 in the ATP Rankings to a career-high No. 57. He also competed in the Intesa Sanpaolo Next Gen ATP Finals in Milan. The 19-year-old is the second seed and begins his tournament against Australian Aleksandar Vukic or Frenchman Hugo Grenier.

3) Former Champion Returns: Czech Jiri Vesely clinched his second ATP Tour crown in Pune in 2020, winning three three-set matches en route to the trophy. The fourth seed, who will make his fourth appearance at the hard-court tournament, will face Dennis Novak or Bernabe Zapata Miralles in his first match.

4) First-Time Winner? Third seed Gianluca Mager, fifth seed Daniel Altmaier and sixth seed Emil Ruusuvuori will all be aiming to win their first tour-level title this week in India. The trio has captured 11 ATP Challenger Tour trophies between them, but they have never triumphed at this level.

Mager opens against Indian wild card Arjun Kadhe or Portugal’s Joao Sousa, while Altmaier plays another Indian wild card in the form of Prajnesh Gunneswaran. Ruusuvuori kicks off his campaign against Belarusian Egor Gerasimov.

5) Saville/Smith Top Seeds In Doubles: Luke Saville and John-Patrick Smith are the top seeds in the doubles draw and are teaming for the third time this season. The Australians will face stiff competition from second seeds Rohan Bopanna and Ramkumar Ramanathan and third seeds Szymon Walkow and Jan Zielinski. Marc Polmans and Matt Reid are the fourth seeds, with singles stars Musetti (w/Gaio) and Vesely (w/Erler) among those also in doubles action. 

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Relive Nadal's Epic Australian Open Victory In Pictures

  • Posted: Jan 30, 2022

Rafael Nadal defeated Daniil Medvedev 2-6, 6-7(5), 6-4, 6-4, 7-5 in a thrilling five-hour, 24-minute Australian Open final to earn a record-breaking 21st Grand Slam title. ATPTour.com relives the memorable battle through pictures.

Rafael Nadal and Daniil Medvedev
Photo Credit:AFP/Getty Images
This was the fifth ATP Head2Head meeting between Nadal and Medvedev. They also clashed in the 2019 US Open final, which Nadal won in five sets.

Daniil Medvedev
Photo Credit: Graham Denholm/Getty Images
Medvedev got off to a quick start inside Rod Laver Arena. The World No. 2 made just five unforced errors in the first set to sprint to a 6-2 lead.

Daniil Medvedev
Photo Credit: AFP/Getty Images
The Russian then clawed through a gruelling 84-minute second set to take a two-set lead. Medvedev was firing on all cylinders. Not only was he more consistent than Nadal, but he used his baseline game to push the Spaniard all over the court. 

Leading 3-2 in the third set, he earned a 0/40 advantage on Nadal’s serve. A second consecutive major title was drawing near for the 2021 US Open champion.

Rafael Nadal Fans
Photo Credit: AFP/Getty Images
But the crowd was fully behind Nadal throughout. The legendary lefty continued to fight for every point, and the fans helped inspire the 35-year-old to continue looking for ways back into the match.

Rafael Nadal
Photo Credit: Mark Metcalfe/Getty Images
Nadal had only come back from two sets down three times in his career, with the most recent instance coming at Wimbledon in 2007 against Mikhail Youzhny. Nevertheless, the World No. 5 raised his level and forced a fourth set.

Rafael Nadal
Photo Credit: Quinn Rooney/Getty Images
Nadal fully seized the momentum from there, firing away with his lethal forehand and stepping into backhands inside the baseline. As Medvedev began to show holes in his game, the Spaniard took full advantage to push the clash into a deciding set. This was the seventh time a Grand Slam final Nadal has contested has gone to a fifth set.

Rafael Nadal
Photo Credit: Mark Metcalfe/Getty Images
Despite letting slip his first opportunity to serve out the championship at 5-4 in the fifth set, Nadal immediately broke back to earn another chance. This time, the lefty converted to break a tie with Novak Djokovic and Roger Federer for the most men’s singles major crowns in history.

Rafael Nadal
Photo Credit: Mark Metcalfe/Getty Images
Nadal quickly went to his box to celebrate with his team and family. He shared an emotional moment with his father, Sebastian Nadal.

Rafael Nadal
Photo Credit: Darrian Traynor/Getty Images
This was Nadal’s 21st Grand Slam trophy and his 90th tour-level victory overall. The former World No. 1 is now 21-8 in major finals.

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Nadal: 'Biggest Comeback of My Career'

  • Posted: Jan 30, 2022

Rafael Nadal has never been one to give up in moments of adversity, but he surprised even himself with his stunning five-set win over Daniil Medvedev in the Australian Open final on Sunday.

“If we put everything together, the scenario, the momentum, what it means…yeah, [it’s] probably the biggest comeback of my tennis career,” said the Spaniard in his post-match press conference.

The sixth seed rallied from two-sets-to-love down to seal an epic 2-6, 6-7(5), 6-4, 6-4, 7-5 victory on Rod Laver Arena and become the first man to 21 Grand Slam singles titles.

“At the end history is about the victory, but the way that you win the match in terms of personal feelings is different,” Nadal said. “The way that I achieved this trophy tonight was just unforgettable, one of the most emotional matches of my tennis career, without a doubt. [It] means a lot to me.”

Despite being 0/40 down on his own serve with the Russian up two sets and leading 3-2 in the third set, Nadal said he had nonetheless retained a semblance of belief that he could stay in contention with Medvedev.

“In that moment, of course, the situation was critical,” said Nadal, “but sport is unpredictable. The normal thing is to lose the match in straight sets from that situation. On the other hand, I had a big chance in the second [set] too.

“I was repeating to myself during the whole match, I lost a lot of times here [in Melbourne] having chances, sometimes I was a little bit unlucky. I just wanted to keep believing until the end. I just wanted to give myself a chance.

“That’s what I did. Just fight, just keep belief in trying to find a solution. Of course, I was lucky to save that moment. [There were] a lot of moments that can decide the final like this.”

The Spaniard was also full of praise for Medvedev, who won his maiden Grand Slam title at the US Open in September. “I think Daniil is a great champion,” said Nadal. “He accepted the loss very well and I can say thanks because it’s a very hard night for him. I know how tough it is to be in that position.”

Nadal acknowledged the significance of winning his 21st Grand Slam title but insisted his title in Melbourne will not suddenly make him view his own career any differently. “It’s amazing to achieve another Grand Slam at this moment of my career,” said the Spaniard. “Of course, I know it’s a special number, 21. I know what it means, but from my point of view today is an unforgettable day…I feel lucky to achieve one more very special thing in my tennis career.

“I really believe that I hold a very positive spirit. For the last six months, I really fought a lot to try to be back on court…[There] have been very tough moments because you don’t know if you’re going to have the chance. I feel honoured.”

It’s been a long journey since a 19-year-old Nadal picked up his first major crown at Roland Garros back in 2005, and he also admitted the feelings around his major victories had changed with age.

“[Today was] more emotional than the first one, no doubt about that,” said Nadal. “At the latter stages of your career, I think you enjoy these moments more because you know the chances are less. When you are 19 of course it is super special, but you know if you are playing well, you’re going to keep having chances to enjoy [such] moments.”

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Medvedev: “Huge Respect” For History-Maker Nadal

  • Posted: Jan 30, 2022

Up against an all-time legend on the brink of history, Daniil Medvedev came oh-so-close to spoiling Rafael Nadal’s chase for major title No. 21.

The World No. 2 led the Spaniard by two sets in Sunday’s Australian Open final before an inspired Nadal roared back for a thrilling 2-6, 6-7(5), 6-4, 6-4, 7-5 victory on Rod Laver Arena.

“[I have] huge respect for Rafa,” said Medvedev in his post-match press conference. “Huge respect for beating me because I tried my best.”

The Russian was particularly impressed with how Nadal handled the pressure knowing he was trying to achieve something no male player had before.

“The way he managed to play throughout all these sets, even in the tough moments, for him it was for making history,” said Medvedev. “For sure he tried not to think about it, but it must have been somewhere in his head.”

Earlier, during the trophy ceremony, Medvedev had highlighted the physical prowess of the Spaniard as a key decider in the marathon encounter.

“[It’s] tough to talk after five hours, 30 minutes and losing, but I want to congratulate Rafa because what he did today, I was amazed,” said Medvedev. “I tried during the match just to play tennis, but after the match I asked him, ‘Are you tired?’, because it was insane.”

Medvedev added that the level was “very high” before addressing Nadal directly. “You raised your level after two sets for the 21st Grand Slam. I thought you were going to get tired, maybe you did just a little but still won the match,” said Medvedev. “You’re an amazing champion.”

Despite coming painfully close to picking up consecutive Grand Slam titles after his maiden major win at the US Open last September, the Russian was not downbeat about his own performance in the Melbourne final. “I’m not that disappointed,” said Medvedev. “It was a huge match, for sure some small points, small details that I could have done better if I wanted to win. But that’s tennis. That’s life.”

Medvedev explained how he tried to make Nadal run in the fifth set. But it was to no avail.

“He was really strong, even at four hours,” said Medvedev. “He didn’t play for six months. He told me after the match that he hadn’t practised much. It was unreal.”

The Russian also refused to dwell on the three break points he held on the Nadal serve when 3-2 up in the third set, opportunities that ultimately got away from him. “I don’t remember all of [the break points] in detail, but I remember that I made all three returns,” said Medvedev. “Just got a little bit tight. But, again, that’s tennis. Should have done better. Should have hit a winner. Maybe would have won the match.”

Medvedev still holds great belief in the methods that have taken him to No. 2 in the ATP Rankings and has already identified his areas for improvement for next time. “Tactically nothing changed. I feel like I was playing right, but Rafa stepped up,” said Medvedev. “The only thing was he was stronger than me physically today. There were some shots and points where I was a little bit on the back foot. Rafa takes control of these moments.”

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