The Daily Telegraph - Sport

Unlucky Nadal goes out without playing a shot after victory for Zverev

Spaniard’s triumph over Tsitsipas proves in vain Federer favourite to win seventh ATP Finals title

- By Simon Briggs TENNIS CORRESPOND­ENT at the O2 Arena

Rafael Nadal suffered the most unnatural of exits from the O2 Arena last night, as he was eliminated without playing a shot. But his old foe Roger Federer will continue to challenge for a seventh ATP Finals title this afternoon.

The complex permutatio­ns of Group Bjorn Borg meant that Nadal was relying on Daniil Medvedev to pull off a victory in the final roundrobin match, after the Spaniard had earlier beaten Stefano Tsitsipas 6-7 (4-7), 6-4, 7-5. The incentives for Medvedev himself were limited, however, as he had already been eliminated. He was all too relaxed as he went down to defending champion Alexander Zverev by a 6-4, 7-6 margin. The upshot is that today’s semi-finals will begin with Federer pitting his experience against the 21-year-old Greek Tsitsipas.

In the second semi-final Zverev faces Dominic Thiem.

Meanwhile, Nadal will be on a flight back to Madrid, where he will join the Spanish team ahead of next week’s new-look Davis Cup finals.

Fortunatel­y, Nadal is a master of positive thinking. He has needed to be, given that at least one foot specialist tried to talk him out of a profession­al sporting career while he was still a teenager.

Nadal came into the interview room yesterday after his own afternoon victory against Tsitsipas, which occupied nearly three hours. And although he did not yet know whether he would reach the semifinals, he was pleased with the way his game has developed over the course of the week. “Preparatio­n have been very short,” said Nadal, who was not able to serve in the build-up because of a strained abdominal muscle. “And is the worst tournament possible to arrive without the best preparatio­n possible.

“The first day you play one of the best players of the world in a tough surface, so if you don’t arrive with plenty of confidence on your body and your movements and everything, things become much more difficult, no? I think I have been improving on my tennis every day. If I’m not in that semi-finals, I go to Madrid with positive confidence that I am playing better and better.”

As for Federer, he might not have won a major in 2019, but he will still start this afternoon’s semi-final as the favourite to land the next biggest prize after his stunning upset win over Novak Djokovic on Thursday night. That result met with the approval of at least 80 per cent of the O2 crowd. Federer has always been favoured here, to such an extent that he sometimes made even Andy Murray feel like he was playing an away match.

Another delighted observer was

BBC commentato­r Tim Henman, who has long been an admirer of Federer’s net-rushing style – not least because he won his first six completed matches against the man now widely seen as the GOAT, or Greatest Of All Time. Indeed, Henman admitted yesterday to feeling a little guilty about having

predicted Djokovic as Thursday’s likely winner. “It was an amazing performanc­e,” said Henman yesterday. “I was sort of disappoint­ed in myself almost that we sit in the commentary box and try and write him [Federer] off. On an indoor court that’s playing a bit quick, that’s borderline naive.

“His serve was up by six or seven miles per hour. I think it was hotter in there last night, which might have made it a bit quicker. But every time he got the chance to pull the trigger from the baseline, he did. And he didn’t make many unforced errors. It was one of his very best performanc­es I have seen.”

While yesterday’s complexiti­es might not have worked out for Nadal, he did go away with a giant silver cup, after outgoing ATP president Chris Kermode presented him with the trophy awarded to the year-end No1.

“I am super happy,” said Nadal in response. “After all the things I went through in my career with injuries, I never thought at 33½ I would have this trophy in my hands again. It’s something really emotional for me, a lot of work in the shadows to be where we are today. Without all my team and family next to me, this thing would be impossible. Thank you for the support.”

Nadal’s feat means that there is a neat symmetry about the three giants who have dominated world tennis for the past decade and more. He, Federer and Djokovic have each now finished as year-end No1 on five different occasions.

 ??  ?? At full stretch: Alexander Zverev plays a backhand against Daniil Medvedev
At full stretch: Alexander Zverev plays a backhand against Daniil Medvedev
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