Otago Daily Times

Thiem outshines Nadal to reach last four

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LONDON: Austrian Dominic Thiem produced a fearless display of attacking tennis to beat Rafael Nadal 76 (75), 76 (4) in a highqualit­y duel to book his place in the last four at the ATP Finals yesterday.

The world No 3 struck 37 clean winners to claim his second roundrobin victory and reigning champion Stefanos Tsitsipas’s narrow defeat of Andrey Rublev later guaranteed the Austrian a semifinal spot with a match to spare.

‘‘Definitely one of the better matches I have played so far in my career,’’ the US Open champion Thiem said.

Crucially, he saved a couple of set points in the first tiebreak before whipping away a forehand to take an opening set in which there was barely a cigarette paper between the two.

Spaniard Nadal, bidding to win the only big title to elude him, engineered the first break of the match at 33 in the second set only for Thiem to reply in stunning fashion.

Nadal was on the brink of defeat when he slipped 040 behind serving at 45 after a wayward smash, but the 20time grand slam champion dug himself out of a hole, saving three match points, one with a deft drop volley that clipped the tape.

Thiem was unshakeabl­e, however, and played the sort of courageous tennis that has become his trademark as he forged his way into a 63 lead in the day’s second tiebreak.

Nadal clawed one point back, but Thiem finished it off when his opponent dragged a backhand wide, a rare unforced error in an absorbing contest sadly played out in an empty O2 Arena.

‘‘It was very important to get that first set because the winning percentage he has after winning the first set is incredible,’’ Thiem, who claimed a sixth win in 15 matches against Nadal, said.

‘‘It’s almost impossible to beat him after losing the first set.’’

Nadal said ‘‘small details’’ decided a superb contest and remained confident he could still win the elusive title, although tomorrow he faces a shootout against Tsitsipas, who survived an ambush by Russian newcomer Rublev to win 61, 46, 76 (86).

‘‘It’s going to be another tough one but playing like this I am confident that I can have my chances in the tournament,’’ Nadal, twice a runnerup in London, said.

The quality of the rallies in the first set would have graced any final and heading into the tiebreak both players had won 34 points, with hardly a free gift in sight.

So it was a surprise to see a couple of errors from both men in the breaker. Nadal served a doublefaul­t and Thiem, after battling back from 25 to 55, then threw in one of his own.

Nadal netted a routine backhand on his first set point but was powerless as Thiem saved another with a rasping forehand.

Thiem’s chance then arrived and he was ruthless, again clubbing a forehand out of the Spaniard’s reach.

When Nadal saved the match points in the 10th game it looked like the contest would swing his way but Thiem had other ideas.

Elegant Greek Tsitsipas took the opening set against Rublev in 19 minutes but then got dragged into a dogfight.

The combative Rublev grabbed the second set out of nowhere and was the aggressor for much of the decider, eking out a match point in the deciding set tiebreak only to doublefaul­t.

Tsitsipas, beaten by Thiem on Monday, full advantage of his fortune to win the next two points and keep his hopes of advancing to the semifinals in his own hands. — Reuters

 ?? PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES ?? Making a good fist of things . . . Austrian Dominic Thiem celebrates after his win over Rafael Nadal in their roundrobin clash in the ATP Finals in London yesterday. Thiem won 76 (75), 76 (74).
PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES Making a good fist of things . . . Austrian Dominic Thiem celebrates after his win over Rafael Nadal in their roundrobin clash in the ATP Finals in London yesterday. Thiem won 76 (75), 76 (74).

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