Sunday News

Victory not enough to keep Nadal in ATP Finals

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Defending champion Alexander Zverev secured the last semifinal spot at the ATP Finals in London yesterday, eliminatin­g Rafael Nadal in the process.

Zverev beat already eliminated Daniil Medvedev 6-4 7-6 (4) at the O2 Arena to finish second behind Stefanos Tsitsipas in the group and set up a semifinal against Dominic Thiem.

Earlier, Nadal stayed in contention by rallying to beat Tsitsipas 6-7 (4) 6-4 7-5 for his second win of the round-robin stage.

But Zverev’s win left him, Nadal and Tsitispas with identical 2-1 records – with the topranked Spaniard eliminated based on the tournament’s tiebreaker rules.

It means only one of tennis’ Big Three made the semifinals as Novak Djokovic was eliminated on Friday. Tsitsipas will face sixtime champion Roger Federer in the first semifinal today.

‘‘The young guys have been playing much better tennis than they were maybe last year,’’ Zverev said. ‘‘Nobody expected [Nadal] to be out from our group. Our group was very, very difficult, and for me and Stefanos to qualify, I don’t think a lot of people would have picked [that].’’

Medvedev (0-3) had only pride to play for against Zverev and was broken in the opening game.

The Russian largely held his own after that but couldn’t force a single break point and doublefaul­ted to go 5-3 down in the second-set tiebreaker.

Zverev converted his first match point with an ace.

The seventh-ranked German had a major breakthrou­gh in winning last year’s tournament, beating Federer in the semifinals and Djokovic in the final. He’ll come up against Thiem, who impressed by beating those same two players in the group phase this week.

Tsitsipas had already secured a semifinal spot by winning his opening two matches but still pushed Nadal to the wire in a match that lasted nearly three hours.

That effort could cost him against Federer, who needed only 73 minutes to beat Djokovic in his final group-stage match on Friday and spent yesterday resting up.

But at 21, Tsitsipas is 17 years younger than Federer, and said he felt confident he’d recover quickly.

After saving a match point at 5-1 down in the third set against Medvedev on Thursday before rallying to win, Nadal’s comeback wasn’t quite as dramatic this time.

He never faced a break point in the match but lost the last three points of the first-set tiebreaker to hand Tsitsipas the lead.

But he broke for a 5-3 lead in the second set and again to make it 6-5 in the third, then converted his first match point when Tsitsipas netted a forehand.

After the match, Nadal was presented with a trophy on court for having secured the year-end No 1 ranking.

Djokovic’s chances of overtaking him ended when he was eliminated with the loss to Federer.

It’s the fifth time that the 19-time grand slam winner ends the year atop the rankings, tied for second on the all-time list with Djokovic, Federer and Jimmy Connors. Pete Sampras did it six times.

At 33, Nadal is the oldest man to finish the year as No 1.

 ?? AP ?? Germany’s Alexander Zverev returns to Russia’s Daniil Medvedev during the win that took him into the ATP semifinals.
AP Germany’s Alexander Zverev returns to Russia’s Daniil Medvedev during the win that took him into the ATP semifinals.
 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Rafael Nadal celebrates in his match against Stefanos Tsitsipas, of Greece, yesterday.
GETTY IMAGES Rafael Nadal celebrates in his match against Stefanos Tsitsipas, of Greece, yesterday.

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