New Straits Times

TOP SEEDS SEAL SHANGHAI SHOWDOWN

Nadal and Federer to face off for title

-

RAFAEL Nadal and Roger Federer will meet in today’s final of the Shanghai Masters, just the latest chapter in their storied rivalry.

The celebrated duo have faced one another 37 times, with the Spaniard and World No 1 Nadal winning 23 of their contests.

And the 31-year-old Nadal, who has never won the Shanghai Masters, will be slight favourite this time because he goes into the showdown on a terrific run of form and Federer faces a quicker turn around.

Nadal, a 16-time Grand Slam champion, triumphed at the US Open and then last week at the China Open for his sixth title of another remarkable campaign.

But he was forced to survive a rollercoas­ter with fourth seed Marin Cilic in their semi-final, saving three set points in the opener before pulling through 75, 7-6 (7-3).

The Swiss Federer, the World No 2 chasing a second Shanghai crown, rolled back the years to recover from a set down and defeat Juan Martin del Potro 3-6, 63, 6-3.

The 36-year-old Federer afterwards dismissed concerns about his shorter rest time — his was the later match — and called the rivalry with Nadal “special.”

“The way we both play, play so very different from one another, and also the attitude, the way we go through our lives, it’s all very different in some ways,” said Federer, a crowd favourite in Shanghai.

“But we have a similar mindset in the big moments, I came to realise that when we played doubles (together recently at the Laver Cup).

“No sense of urgency or panic. You can tell we have been there many, many times before.

“He’s a great champ and he’s definitely one of the guys that makes me a better player.

“He made me rework my game and go back to the practice courts and think about what I could change.

“For that I’m happy for the losses I took (against him) and it’s nice that at this stage of my career we still have these matches going on.”

Federer had said that he wanted revenge over the 16th-seeded Argentine Del Potro for defeat in the quarter-finals at the US Open this summer.

And he eventually got it.

Del Potro, the 2009 US Open champion whose career has been blighted by wrist injuries, quickly allayed fears that his latest problem would be a major handicap.

The 29-year-old fell and hurt his left wrist in winning his quarter-final and there were suggestion­s he may not even make yesterday’s match.

Croatia’s Cilic had only ever got the better of Nadal once in five previous meetings, but he made the top seed work hard for this latest win.

Nadal said he was just glad to be in the final.

“The way doesn’t matter,” he said with a smile. “We are at the highest level of our sport so nobody wins easy.

“And if you want to compete in the most important events of the year and try to go for the victories, for sure you’re going to have tough matches, and today was one of them.”

Nadal displayed a flash of irritation at one point during the second set, as he and Cilic swapped breaks, bashing himself on the knee twice in annoyance with his racquet.

The Spaniard brushed the incident off.

“Sometimes I get frustrated too, that’s all,” he said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia