Khaleej Times

Dimitrov targets Grand Slams after Finals glory

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london — Grigor Dimitrov’s talent took him to the brink of his biggest career win — but he needed more than that to get over the line.

The sixth-seeded Bulgarian claimed the title at the season-ending ATP Finals on Sunday, prevailing on his fifth match point to beat David Goffin 7-5, 4-6, 6-3 in the final.

“I felt I had a good mental toughness throughout the whole year,” Dimitrov said. “So when my body’s allowing me to do this kind of preparatio­n, I feel I already have an advantage over any other player. And right now those are the moments that I rise up to.”

It wasn’t the Roger Federer-Rafael Nadal matchup many fans had hoped for, but they were left satisfied as the two 26-year-olds delivered the longest final since the tournament returned to a three-set format in 2008.

Dimitrov won in 2 hours, 30 minutes, 15 seconds, adding 11 minutes to the mark set by Federer and Jo-Wilfried Tsonga in 2011.

That wasn’t the only record Dimitrov set. After winning all five of his matches at the O2 Arena, he became the first player to win the elite tournament on debut since 1998, when Alex Corretja of Spain triumphed in Hanover.

“I was a little bit tired,” said Dimitrov, who beat Goffin for the loss of just two games when they met on Wednesday. “I had to play a few matches obviously back-toback against solid opponents. I knew that David is going to try something new. He had to be aggressive in order so he doesn’t let me play my game.”

Goffin’s adjustment­s paid off early as he broke Dimitrov’s first two service games either side of losing his own, before settling down to control the opener.

However, Dimitrov fought his way back. He leveled in the eighth game before breaking once more in the 12th to snatch the set, despite Goffin hitting eight more winners.

Dimitrov’s confidence carried into the second set, where he brought up the first break point in the sixth game, only for Goffin to produce a stunning cross-court backhand winner to save it. The momentum back with him, Goffin broke the following game for a 4-3 lead and calmly closed out the set. Having become the sixth player to beat Nadal and Federer at the same tournament — the latter from a set down in the semifinals — Goffin had every reason to be confident after drawing level. But he wasted four break points in the opening game and they would turn out to be his only chances in the decider.

“I think after this week I’m a better player mentally,” said Goffin, who ends the season at a career-high No. 7 ranking. “I proved to myself that I can do it.”

Dimitrov was more clinical, striking in the sixth game to take control of the third set. However, the Bulgarian has had problems closing matches out this season — losing three times after holding match points — and had cause for concern when Goffin saved his first three to hold from 0-40 down at 2-5.

Dimitrov served his way to 4015 but saw another chance drift away, before Goffin finally netted a backhand volley to end the match. — AP

 ?? — AP ?? Grigor Dimitrov of Bulgaria lifts the trophy after winning the ATP World Finals title.
— AP Grigor Dimitrov of Bulgaria lifts the trophy after winning the ATP World Finals title.

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