The Daily Courier

Nadal blows biggest of leads

Spaniard lets 2-set lead disappear

-

MELBOURNE, Australia — Rafael Nadal entered his Australian Open quarterfin­al with a 223-1 record when grabbing the first two sets of a Grand Slam match.

Thanks to his own mistakes — and some spirited play by Stefanos Tsitsipas — that mark is now 223-2.

A couple of uncharacte­ristically sloppy overheads and a framed backhand in a third-set tiebreaker began Nadal’s undoing, and his bid here for a men’s-record 21st major championsh­ip eventually ended Wednesday with 3-6, 2-6, 7-6 (4), 6-4, 7-5 loss to the younger, sharper Tsitsipas.

“Was little bit of everything, no? I missed a couple of balls in the tiebreak that I shouldn’t — that I could not — miss if I want to win. And that’s it,” said Nadal, who briefly left the Spanish portion of his postmatch news conference after clutching at his cramping right hamstring.

“I have to go back home,” Nadal said, “and practice to be better.”

At his put-the-ball-where-he-wantsit best in the early going, Nadal went ahead rather easily, winning 27 consecutiv­e points on his serve in one stretch and running his streak of consecutiv­e sets won at major tournament­s to 35, one shy of Roger Federer’s record for the profession­al era.

Nadal and Federer are currently tied at 20 Grand Slam singles titles, more than any other man in the history of a sport that dates to the late 1800s.

But Tsitsipas never wavered and that surprising­ly poor tiebreaker by Nadal — thinking too far ahead, perhaps? — helped hand over the third set and begin the epic comeback.

“I started very nervous, I won’t lie,” the fifth-seeded Tsitsipas said. “But I don’t know what happened after the third set. I just flied like a little bird. Everything was working for me. The emotions at the very end are indescriba­ble.”

As Tsitsipas played, in Nadal’s estimation, a “very, very high level of tennis” over the last two sets, the 34year-old Spaniard’s play dipped considerab­ly.

Nadal made a total of only 10 unforced errors in the first two sets combined, then 32 the rest of the way — 11 in the third, 14 in the fourth, seven in the fifth.

The only other occasion in which Nadal went from a two-set advantage to a defeat in a Slam came at the 2015 U.S. Open against Fabio Fognini (who just so happened to have lost to Nadal in the fourth round at Melbourne Park this year).

 ?? The Associated Press ?? Greece’s Stefanos Tsitsipas reacts after defeating Spain’s Rafael Nadal at the Australian Open in Melbourne on Wednesday.
The Associated Press Greece’s Stefanos Tsitsipas reacts after defeating Spain’s Rafael Nadal at the Australian Open in Melbourne on Wednesday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada