Daily Mail

THIEM WON’T STAND STILL

Young gun eyes final as old stager Nadal crashes out

- MIKE DICKSON Tennis Correspond­ent in Melbourne

Just when you thought the old order was continuing with its hegemony in men’s tennis, Rafael Nadal finally met his match in terms of brutal baseline slugging.

Perhaps time — or more precisely thiem — does not stand still, after all, when it comes to winning tennis’s biggest prizes.

there will be a new finalist in the Australian Open with the semis divided into matches of two generation­s. Alex Zverev will face Dominic thiem and they will compete to meet either Novak Djokovic or Roger Federer.

Austrian thiem, 26, held his nerve in the tiebreaks to defeat the world No 1 7-6, 7-6, 4-6, 7-6 after four hours and 10 minutes.

Nadal went down fighting as ever, and not just against the Austrian. unusually rattled, he clashed with French umpire Aurelie tourte following a code violation for oversteppi­ng the 25-second shot clock limit.

After Federer’s run- in with officialdo­m earlier this week for swearing, it was the second time that a female in the chair has acted firmly against one of the feted Big three. On both occasions they were right to do so, with Nadal telling tourte: ‘You don’t like good tennis’.

Both episodes were a reminder that underneath their polished exteriors, Nadal and Federer are above all ferocious competitor­s.

the spaniard, who complained about the air- conditioni­ng pipe by his chair not working, played it down later. ‘I don’t see myself with a negative attitude during the whole match,’ said Nadal.

‘I don’t see myself frustrated or nervous at all. I just tried my best in every single moment. sorry, I don’t see this.’

thiem ( right) can be selfeffaci­ng but has appeared more assertive this fortnight, notably in abruptly ending a new coaching relationsh­ip with Austrian legend thomas Muster, because he quickly saw it was not working.

that has translated on court into him reaching a Grand slam semi-final outside Roland Garros for the first time. His results in Paris, where he has made two semis and two finals (losing both of them to Nadal) have dwarfed results at other majors.

Indeed the long-term fall- out from this result could be the belief it may give him when they next meet on the clay. In the context of the great race to see who can win most Grand slam titles — the spaniard, on 19, is one behind Federer — that could prove significan­t.

Armed with that majestic single-handed backhand, thiem will face the German Zverev, 22, whom he has beaten six times out of eight.

there was a temptation to snigger when, at the start of the tournament, Zverev — a four-set winner over stan Wawrinka — joined in the Nick Kyrgiosins­pired campaign to raise money for bushfire victims by pledging that he would donate all his prize money if he won the title.

Zverev, continuall­y doublefaul­ting, had a torrid time in the AtP Cup this month and it seemed any big giveaway was the stuff of fantasy. Yet here he is, two matches away from handing over £2.23m.

‘If I win it’s a lot of money for me,’ he said, also referring to the fact that his father, a former soviet player, was compelled to give the government his winnings.

‘ I am not Roger Federer,

I’m not LeBron James, something like that. this is still big. But at the same time I know that there are people right now in this beautiful country who lost their homes and actually they need the money. I think there’s much better use for those people with that money than I have right now.’

This morning Federer embarks on a task whose degree of difficulty is about equal to beating Nadal at Roland Garros — overcoming Djokovic on Rod Laver Arena.

For all that he should have beaten him at Wimbledon — and did beat him at the AtP Finals in November — it looks like a mission that will be close to impossible, given his advancing years and the exhausting matches he has played to get this far.

Federer is still trying to believe he has an upset in him, and will draw on those two matches in their 50th encounter. ‘In every way, it helps me, does me good,’ said the swiss. ‘ It showed me he is beatable. It always does me good to know that, at my age, I can prove from time to time I can beat Rafa and Novak. It gives me a little extra confidence and helps me forget Wimbledon, even if I played very well there.’

• JAMIE MURRAY and Bethanie Mattek-sands, who won the us Open mixed doubles, advanced to the semi- finals here when they beat saisai Zheng of China and Joran Vliegen of Belgium 6-3, 6-4.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Pain game: Rafa Nadal suffers on his way to defeat
GETTY IMAGES Pain game: Rafa Nadal suffers on his way to defeat
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