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"His backhand's good. His serve's good. His forehand's good. His movement is good," Murray said afterward. "He does everything really, really well."
Two qualities Murray neglected to mention: Nadal's all-out intensity, and his propensity for coming up big at the biggest times.
"In the crucial points today, Rafael was really good," said Nadal's uncle and coach, Toni, "and Murray was not too good."
Nadal faced a set point at 6-5 in the tiebreaker, but won the last three points. Then he trailed 4-2 in the third set, but reeled off the final four games of the match.
Afterward, Murray said something Berdych might want to ponder.
"You're not going to be able to play every single point on your terms against the best player in the world, one of the best players ever. You can't," Murray said.
Nadal is 7-3 against Berdych, with victories in their past six matches. But the 24-year-old Berdych never has played with the confidence and patience he's displayed while becoming the first Czech man to reach the Wimbledon final since Ivan Lendl in 1987.
"The feeling is absolutely amazing. It is really tough to describe," Berdych said. "Every young kid, from the first time he hits the ball and thinks to be a tennis player, this is the dream."
He showed promise at age 18 by upsetting Federer at the 2004 Athens Olympics, but has taken a while to develop as an elite player. His booming serve and forehand, though, carried Berdych to the French Open semifinals a month ago, past the top-seeded Federer on Wednesday, and past No. 3 Djokovic on Friday.
The toughest test of all remains.
"I'm looking forward to the next one," Berdych said, "and definitely not (fearing) anybody."
Berdych's major final debut comes in his 28th try, the second-most major tournaments anyone has played before reaching a title match.
Nadal, meanwhile, won his fifth French Open last month, regaining that title after losing in the fourth round a year ago. He later would say his knees were hurting, part of a tough 2009. Nadal missed Wimbledon, began a drought of 11 months without a title, gave up the No. 1 ranking, and had to deal with his parents' separation.
"A very difficult year. Many problems with the knees. Then our loss in Roland Garros. Altogether, it was a bad year," Uncle Toni said.
Rafael Nadal's coach sighed, then broke into a wide grin.
"Now," he added, "life has changed."
[Associated Press;
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