The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Nadal, Medvedev to meet in final

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NEW YORK — Rafael Nadal found himself trailing in a tight first set against a bigger, younger opponent who was finding ways to cause trouble in their U.S. Open semifinal.

Never one to panic, never liable to have a letdown, Nadal hung tough, waited for 24thseeded Matteo Berrettini to wilt ever so slightly and then pounced.

Nadal moved closer to a fourth U.S. Open championsh­ip and 19th Grand Slam title overall — one away from Roger Federer’s record for men — by pulling away for a 76 (6), 64, 61 victory over Berrettini under the roof at Arthur Ashe Stadium on Friday night.

The secondseed­ed Nadal was down 40, then 52, then 64 in the opening tiebreaker before taking the next four points and was on his way.

“You don’t want to be in a tiebreak against a player like Matteo. … I was a little bit lucky, no?” Nadal said. “I survived at that moment and … after that, the match completely changed.”

Sure did. Nadal broke once in the second set and three times in the third, while never facing a single break point in the match.

He will face No. 5 seed Daniil Medvedev of Russia on Sunday.

It is Medvedev’s first major final, Nadal’s 27th. They’ve played each other once before, the final of the Montreal Masters hardcourt tournament in August, and Nadal won 63, 60.

“He’s one of the more solid players on tour,” Nadal said. “He is making steps forward every single week.”

Medvedev advanced earlier Friday by beating Grigor Dimitrov 76 (5), 64, 63 for his tourleadin­g 50th win of the season.

The 23yearold Russian first made a name for himself at the U.S. Open by earning the wrath of spectators. During his oncourt interview Friday, Medvedev referenced his “tournament of controvers­ies,” which included accumulati­ng $19,000 in fines and antagonizi­ng booing fans last week, saying he knew it was “not going to be easy with the public.”

Medvedev’s tennis was a bit scratchy Friday, and like Nadal, he barely avoided dropping the opening set. But he did just enough with his mostly defensive style to get past Dimitrov, who had eliminated Federer in a fiveset quarterfin­al.

“I do think he was better player in first set. I do think I was kind of lucky to win it,” Medvedev said about Dimitrov. “Then the momentum changed completely. I think after, I was playing better than him in the next two sets.”

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