New York Post

LONG MAY HE SPAIN

Nadal wins in marathon quarterfin­al

- By JONATHAN LEHMAN

There are no chill Rafael Nadal matches, like oh cool, I’ll watch some tennis and my blood pressure will stay level.

There are the steamrolle­r jobs, in which he grimly grinds an overwhelme­d opponent into red dust. There are the matches he actually loses — as the past and present world No. 1, a 17-time major winner, these are rare — but not before leaving behind a Mediterran­ean Sea’s worth of sweat and tears.

Then there are the matches like Tuesday’s instant-classic night-and-earlymorni­ng-cap on Arthur Ashe Stadium, when he draws a very game foe into a battle of nerve and endurance, a contest of attrition. It’s nearly impossible to best Nadal in one of these, and he proved it again in a marathon 0-6, 6-4, 7-5, 6-7 (4), 7-6 (5) victory over No. 9 seed Dominic Thiem in the U.S. Open quarterfin­als that kept his bid for back-to-back titles alive by the thinnest of margins.

The match ended at 2:04 a.m. after four hours and 49 minutes — the longest match Nadal has played at the U.S. Open.

“Always the passion to keep going, to play one more point, to save one more ball,” Nadal said in his on-court interview, summing up both his willpower in the fifth set and what has served him as his greatest tennis trait. “Keep going always, you can a little bit more, and that’s the only reason I can be where I am today.”

There was precious little to separate Nadal and Thiem, and in the fifth-set tiebreak, they remained within a point until the last ball. Some patented Nadal scrambling forced Thiem to take one more swing, an overhead, and the 25-year-old Austrian pulled it long.

“It’s been a great battle,” Nadal said. “I’ve played many, many hours on this amazing court. I’m not sorry. I’m just sorry for my legs.”

Thiem, who entered the match with a 3-7 record in the rivalry (all of those matches on Nadal’s preferred clay), delivered an impeccable first set to bagel a listless Nadal in a mere 24 minutes. John McEnroe speculated on the ESPN broadcast, “Physically there’s something off because he’s not moving.”

“Wake up,” Nadal said he told himself. “It was a very tough start. Finish this first set, forget about this start and try to stay in the match in the second. ... And that’s what happened.”

The pure quality of the tennis peaked in the third set, both players whaling away from the baseline: Nadal unfurling his signature dipping forehand and stepping into his backhand, Thiem hitting the flatter, harder forehand and uncorking a picturesqu­e one-handed backhand.

Nadal stole a break to stay in the set, held quickly for 6-5 and cashed his third set point on the Thiem serve with a missile of a forehand winner. The fourth set followed a similar playbook, Thiem taking the early lead and a resolute Nadal (on his fifth break point of the frame) finally drawing even. But this one went to a tiebreak, lost by a sloppy Nadal more than it was won by Thiem, dragging things to a fifth set.

The weary combatants held serve throughout the fifth — including one triple break point for Nadal — into another tiebreak.

 ?? Anthony J. Causi ?? LATE NIGHT: Rafael Nadal returns a shot during his five-set, quarterfin­al victory over Dominic Thiem on Tuesday at the U.S. Open, a match that lasted almost five hours.
Anthony J. Causi LATE NIGHT: Rafael Nadal returns a shot during his five-set, quarterfin­al victory over Dominic Thiem on Tuesday at the U.S. Open, a match that lasted almost five hours.

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