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Nadal wants long time near the top, not most Slams or No. 1

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AN emotional Rafael Nadal says extending the years among the top players in tennis means more to him than overtaking Roger Federer’s alltime Grand Slam record or chasing after the world number-one ranking.

The 33-year-old Spanish left-hander grabbed his 19th Grand Slam title and fourth US Open crown in thrilling fashion yesterday, outlasting Russian fifth seed Daniil Medvedev 7-5, 6-3, 5-7, 4-6, 6-4 after four hours and 50 minutes at Arthur Ashe Stadium.

“Just very happy. This trophy means everything to me today,” said Nadal, who was moved to tears by a video tribute after the match.

“The last three hours of the match have been very intense, very tough mentally and physically, too. With the video, the crowd that have been as always amazing, all these facts make the moment super special. Unforgetta­ble moment.”

The dramatic victory pulled him within one slam title of matching Federer’s all-time men’s record with top-ranked Novak Djokovic a close third on 16.

But second-ranked Nadal stressed he’s more concerned with extending his career as long and as well as possible than he is setting a major win record.

“I would love to be the one who wins more, but I am not thinking and I’m not going to practice every day or playing tennis for it,” Nadal said.

“I’m playing tennis because I love to play tennis. I can’t just think about Grand Slams. Tennis is more than Grand Slams.

“I need to think about the rest of the things. I play to be happy. Of course, the victory makes me super happy.”

Personal satisfacti­on such as what Nadal derived from holding off stubborn Medvedev in his epic fightback drives Nadal far more than comparing Slam trophy cases.

“That competitio­n, if that attracts fans and creates interest on the people, that’s good for our sport, no? I feel honoured to be part of this battle,” Nadal said.

“But I repeat the same: you can’t be all day looking next to you about if one having more or one having little bit less because you will be frustrated.

“All the things that I achieved in my career are much more than what I ever thought and what I ever dream.

“What gives you the happiness is the personal satisfacti­on that you gave your best. In that way I am very, very calm, very pleased with myself.”

Overtaking Djokovic for a year-end world number-one ranking isn’t high on Nadal’s list of goals either, saying it could detract from longevity and quality.

“I don’t compete for it. I just do my way. If I am able to be number-one doing my way, great. But I always say the same: today it’s not my main goal,” Nadal said.

“With my age and with my goals, I cannot lose energy or time to follow the number-one. I need to think about my career in a different way. For me, my main goal is play as long as possible and being competitiv­e. Sometimes if you need to follow the number-one, you going to lose years of your career.”

 ??  ?? GOT IT: Rafael Nadal celebrates against Daniil Medvedev.
GOT IT: Rafael Nadal celebrates against Daniil Medvedev.

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