Alexander Zverev makes it sixth time lucky against Rafael Nadal at ATP Finals
They call it stormy Monday – except in the literature for the ATP Tour Finals, which labelled day two “momentous” – and so it proved, calamitously so, for Daniil Medvedev and Rafael Nadal.
The fourth iteration of the seasonending tournament, 50 years after it began in an art museum in Tokyo, has a year to run in London to close out 11 years of extraordinary revenue churning before it moves to Turin in 2021. And, although there have been some low-key performances in recent years at the fag-end of the longest season in sport, the event is winding down on the southern reaches of the Thames in a stylish swirl of surprises and quite lovely tennis.
First to fall on day one was Roger Federer, who has won a record six titles; then on Monday afternoon, Stefanos Tsitsipas, the Greek prodigy with poetry on his racket, beat his bete noire, Medvedev, for the first time in six attempts, 7-6 (5), 6-4.
In the evening, there was a bigger shot to the system when Alexander
Zverev, the youngest defending champion in a decade, marmalised the world No 1, Rafael Nadal, 6-2, 6-4 in an hour and 24 minutes. It was his first win over the Spaniard in six attempts, as well. There was symmetry at work, perhaps.
Nobody expected this, though, despite the crushing fact that Nadal, 33, has not won the title in 15 visits, seven of them aborted through injury. He desperately wanted to play the tournament on clay, but it never happened for him – nor will it in Turin.
Nadal, who said recent abdominal muscle strains did not constrict him, added: “He served huge, very fast. Difficult to read. The physical issue was not an excuse at all. The only excuse is I was not good enough tonight.”
Zverev has much to look forward to. He has beaten Federer (in the semi-final last year), Novak Djokovic (in the final) and Nadal in sequence at this tournament, a statement of intent unlikely to be matched by any of his contemporaries.
Will Tuesday be just as bad for the Swiss? Federer, ground down by Dominic Thiem on Sunday night, has a last shot to fill his boots before embarking on a lucrative exhibition tour when he plays the Italian debutant, Matteo Berrettini, in the afternoon, before Djokovic, who smashed Berrettini, takes on Dominic Thiem in the evening.
It’s a bewildering cross-fertilisation of tennis talent and circumstances: the old hanging on against the new, the new daring to tweak the nose of the old, the very rich protesting they have given enough already to the sport before cashing in their chips in far-flung places. But, at the furnace, life remains very hot.
Tsitsipas described his breakthrough win as: “One of the toughest and one of the most important victories of my career so far. I gave myself a big boost today, kept fighting. That last game was one of the toughest I have played. It wasn’t easy. Such a relief. It is not easy coming knowing you have lost five times before. Much love here. It almost feels like I’m playing in Athens.”
There was a dispiriting sense of ennui in the night match. By the time Zverev stepped up to serve it out, it was tempting to wonder if Nadal wanted to be here in the first place. He has never been comfortable on the indoor hardcourt, which he always regarded as Federer’s preserve, rightly so.
Zverev ploughed through his final service game with admirable coolness, sparing no time for sentiment. The finish was clinical. With two match points in his pocket, he fired in a body serve that Nadal could do no more than bang long.
When he won the final last year, the crowd booed boorishly – and were