The Free Press Journal

NADAL THRASHES THIEM TO CLINCH 11TH FRENCH OPEN TITLE

Spaniard thrashes Dominic Thiem to bag his record-extending 11th French Open title

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Rafael Nadal claimed an 11th French Open title on Sunday with a 6-4 6-3 6-2 demolition of Dominic Thiem despite a worrying injury scare in the closing stages of the final. The 32-year-old world number one now has 17 Grand Slam titles, just three behind great rival Roger Federer.

Nadal endured a nervy conclusion to the final, however, when he needed treatment in the fourth game of the third set for a finger injury before sealing victory on a fifth match point when Thiem fired a backhand long.

“It’s really incredible. I played a great match against a great player,” said Nadal.

“I had tough moment in the third set with cramps in my hand. I was very scared but that’s sport — it was very humid.

“To win 11 times here — it’s fantastic and not something I ever dreamed of.”

Nadal joins Australia’s Margaret Court as the only player to win 11 titles at the same major. Victory also took Nadal’s record at Roland Garros to 86 wins and just two losses.

For Thiem, playing in his first Slam final, it was a tremendous letdown for a player who is the only man to have beaten the Spaniard on clay in the last two years.

With a celebrity audience — including actors Hugh Grant and Tim Roth as well as French stars Marion Cotillard and

Jean Dujardin — watching, Nadal flew out of the blocks.

He reeled off the first six points for a 20 lead before Thiem settled and repaired the damage for 2-2.

The Austrian speared a 222 km/h ace just for good measure in the fourth game to save a break point.

He saved another two in the 11-minute sixth game, a performanc­e cheered by the crowd who briefly became more animated when glumlookin­g French football icon Zinedine Zidane was spotted in the stadium. Despite matching Nadal forehand for forehand, Thiem was undone in the 10th game when three errors handed Nadal the opening set after 52 minutes on court.

A wild, misguided forehand sealed his fate, one of 18 unforced errors to Nadal’s 12 in the set.

In their previous nine meetings, all on clay, the man who took the opening set went on to win the match.

That scenario loomed again with Nadal going to 2-0 in the second set on a fifth break point as Thiem fired another backhand wide. Thiem wasted a break point in the seventh game as Nadal collected a time violation for taking too long to serve. The world number one saved it and went on to secure a two sets lead when yet another backhand from the Austrian drifted wide.

Thiem was under the cosh, saving four break points in the first game of the third set before Nadal inevitably broke for 2-1.

Bizarrely, Nadal then halted playing in the fourth game complainin­g of pain in his left hand and stretching his middle finger.

He still won the game anyway before summoning the doctor and trainer courtside. Whatever the problem, his dominance remained and a love game took him to 4-2 before he eventially sealed victory on a fifth match point when the Austrian fired another backhand long.

Krejcikova-Katerina wins

The Czech tennis pair of Barbora Krejcikova and Katerina Siniakova on Sunday earned their maiden Grand Slam doubles title, defeating Japanese duo Makoto Ninomiya and Eri Hozumi 6-3, 6-3 in the final of the French Open women’s doubles. Krejcikova-Siniakova, the sixth seed, needed one hour and five minutes to spoil their rivals’ historic run, after they became the first Japanese duo ever to reach a Grand Slam final.

The Japanese pair squandered a break advantage in the first set as they conceded two service games, dropping only their second set at the 2018 edition, the first having been in the round of 32 against the United States’ Raquel Atawo and Germany’s Anna-Lena Gronefeld. Krejcikova/Siniakova did not face a single break point during the second set, while they seized on the two opportunit­ies they created to become the first Czech duo to win the title since Andrea Hlavackova and Lucie Hradecka did it in 2011.

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 ??  ?? Spain’s Nadal poses with the Mousquetai­res Cup after his victory against Austria’s Dominic Thiem in the French Open final.
Spain’s Nadal poses with the Mousquetai­res Cup after his victory against Austria’s Dominic Thiem in the French Open final.
 ??  ?? Czech Republic’s Katerina (L) and Krejcikova kiss The Simone Mathieu Cup after their win in the women’s double final.
Czech Republic’s Katerina (L) and Krejcikova kiss The Simone Mathieu Cup after their win in the women’s double final.
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