The Freeman

Ruthless Rafa sets up Nishikori final

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World number one Rafael Nadal insisted he's not an automatic favorite on clay, after easing into his 12th Monte Carlo Masters final with a 6-4, 6-1 victory over Grigor Dimitrov on Saturday.

The 31-year-old Nadal needs to win an 11th Monaco title to retain the number one ranking ahead of Roger Federer, and will be widely expected to see off Kei Nishikori in Sunday's final after the Japanese edged out Alexander Zverev in the other semifinal.

"I really don't care if I am favorite or I am not favorite," said Nadal, after beating Dimitrov for the 11th time in 12 meetings.

"I go on court, I try my best. I want to win. Doesn't matter if I am the favorite or I am not the favorite."

Nadal came through a tight first set but always looked too strong for Dimitrov and raced through the second in half an hour.

"He's playing very good on clay. Simple as that. Tactically and everything else," admitted Dimitrov.

"It hurts a lot of us, a lot of the players that are maybe not as physically strong."

bidding for an outright record 31st Masters title this week and extended his run of consecutiv­e sets won on clay to 34 as he closed on a third consecutiv­e Monte Carlo title.

"Being (in) 12 finals already here is something difficult to imagine. To win 10 is difficult to imagine, too," Nadal said.

"In our sport, there is not much time to stop and think about the things that have happened or not happened.

"When I retire, probably we will have the chance to think about it, how difficult all the things that I have done (were)."

Nadal, playing his first ATP tournament since he retired from his Australian Open quarterfin­al against Marin Cilic in January with a hip injury, has shown no signs of rust.

Following a 6-0, 6-2 last-eight demolition of Dominic Thiem, Nadal has lost only 16 games in four matches this week.

Dimitrov immediatel­y put Nadal's serve under pressure with two perfectlyj­udged lobs forcing deuce, but he came through an eight-minute opener.

Nadal didn't take long to get into his stride, breaking at the first time of asking as Dimitrov struggled in the longer rallies.

The Bulgarian continued to go for his shots and brought up three break-back points in game five as Nadal followed a double fault with two wayward groundstro­kes, before firing long.

The fourth seed was displaying the resolve needed to push Nadal on his favorite surface, and came back from break point down twice as the Spaniard continued to miss chances.

But Dimitrov wasted all of his earlier good work, handing Nadal two set points with back-to-back double faults and a wild forehand.

The 16-time Grand Slam champion wrapped up the set with a whipped forehand onto the line.

That effectivel­y ended Dimitrov's chances, and Nadal broke to love twice in a row in the second set before a wide Dimitrov backhand completed yet another comfortabl­e victory.

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