San Francisco Chronicle

Nadal’s No. 16 is especially sweet

- By Howard Fendrich Howard Fendrich is an Associated Press writer.

NEW YORK — Rafael Nadal entered the 2017 Grand Slam season on a 2½-year drought without so much as one appearance in a major final, let alone a title. He ends it having reasserted himself, capped by a U.S. Open final that shaped up as quite a mismatch — and turned out to be exactly that.

His game at a higher level than it needed to be by the end of an unusually easy path through the field, Nadal overwhelme­d Kevin Anderson 6-3, 6-3, 6-4 on Sunday to win his third championsh­ip at Flushing Meadows.

“Of course, after a couple of years without competing at this very high, high level,” Nadal said, “very happy to be back.”

Nadal, ranked No. 1, collected his 16th Grand Slam trophy overall and at his news conference, he wore a white T-shirt listing the date and site of each one. Among men, only Roger Federer has more, with 19. Each of these longtime rivals won two of the four majors this season, marking their return to the sport’s heights.

Nadal has dealt with knee and wrist problems, both likely a result of his physical brand of play, over his career, but 2015 and 2016 were his first seasons without reaching at least one Grand Slam final since 2004, when he was a teenager.

Seems safe to say that, at age 31, he is again the Nadal of old.

“I mean, I’ve always said he’s one of the, obviously, greatest players of our sport, obviously feeling very confident,” Anderson said. “He seems to have turned around a lot of those injuries he’s experience­d the last couple of years. I guess time will tell on that.”

At No. 32, Anderson was the lowest-ranked U.S. Open men’s finalist since the ATP computer rankings began in 1973. The 31-year-old South African had not been past the quarterfin­als at any major tournament in 33 previous appearance­s.

Nadal added to his U.S. Open triumphs in 2010 and 2013 and improved to 16-7 in Grand Slam finals. For the first time since 2013, he appeared in three in a single season, losing to Federer at the Australian Open in January, then beating Stan Wawrinka for his record 10th French Open trophy in June.

Nadal’s career haul also includes two trophies from Wimbledon and one from the Australian Open. All of his big victories have come while being coached by his uncle, Toni, who is stepping aside.

Not since Pete Sampras at Wimbledon in 2000 had a man won a Slam tournament without facing any opponents ranked in the top 20. In New York, the bracket was weakened by the injury withdrawal­s of three of the top five men: past champions Andy Murray, Novak Djokovic and Wawrinka.

Plus, Nadal did not need to deal with Federer: The potential for a semifinal, which would have been their first U.S. Open meeting, was dashed when Juan Martin del Potro eliminated Federer in the quarterfin­als. Nadal then beat del Potro, the 2009 champion but now ranked 28th, in the semis.

Much like Nadal’s 6-2, 6-3, 6-1 win against Wawrinka at Roland Garros, the only beauty of this match was not in its competitiv­eness but in an appreciati­on for one participan­t’s absolute superiorit­y.

Forehands whipped up the line. Two-handed backhands ripped cross-court with ferocity. The spinning, back-to-thenet returns of serves that darted in at him at more than 130 mph and helped him break Anderson four times.

“I learned a lot of lessons,” Anderson said. “It was a difficult match, up against somebody who has been on that stage over 20 times before.”

With Nadal standing way back to receive serves, nearly backing into the line judges, he neutralize­d Anderson’s most effective skill. Anderson began trying to end points quickly with a volley. Two problems: Anderson is not usually a serve-and-volleyer; Nadal is superb at summoning passing shots at extreme speeds and angles, especially when facing the sort of target in Anderson, the tallest (6-foot-8) Grand Slam finalist in history.

At 3-all, 30-all, Anderson double-faulted to offer up Nadal’s fifth break point of the match, then badly pushed a forehand wide. That made the score only 4-3, but the statistics were telling: Anderson had 21 unforced errors, Nadal four. A pattern was establishe­d.

“That,” Nadal said, “changed the rest of the match.”

 ?? Jewel Samad / AFP / Getty Images ?? Rafael Nadal can taste victory with his third U.S. Open trophy and his 16th Grand Slam title.
Jewel Samad / AFP / Getty Images Rafael Nadal can taste victory with his third U.S. Open trophy and his 16th Grand Slam title.

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