Nadal says ending year as number
one is big satisfaction
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[November 16, 2019]
By Martyn Herman
LONDON (Reuters) - It all felt a little
odd at the O2 Arena on Friday.
Rafael Nadal had just beaten rising Greek force Stefanos Tsitsipas
in a classic scrap at the ATP Finals but had no idea whether it was
good enough to keep him in the tournament.
Then, moments after his 6-7(4) 6-4 7-5 victory the 19-time Grand
Slam champion was presented with an enormous silver trophy by the
ATP's soon-to-be-former chief Chris Kermode.
It looked and felt like a victory celebration despite the business
end of the tournament still to play and Nadal's participation in it
out of his hands.
As it turned out, Alexander Zverev's victory later over Daniil
Medvedev made all Nadal's hard work redundant.
But there was no denying the 33-year-old Spaniard deserved the ATP
year-end number one trophy -- even though it was longtime rival
Roger Federer's sublime win over Novak Djokovic the previous night
that actually put it into his arms.
Even Nadal, it seems, needs a favour occasionally. Unfortunately
Medvedev could not oblige.
Nadal won a 12th French Open title this year and then closed to
within one major of Federer's Grand Slam record when he won the U.S
Open, beating Medvedev.
He also reached the Australian Open final and the semis at
Wimbledon, all in a year in which his confidence hit rock bottom
after some shock defeats on the European clay.
He arrived for the ATP Finals with doubts about an abdominal injury
and had not completed a tournament since the U.S. Open in September.
Yet after a disappointing display against Zverev in his opening
match at the ATP Finals, he rebounded in stunning fashion to fight
off two of the players expected to fill the void when Nadal, Federer
and Djokovic depart stage left.
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Spain's Rafael Nadal celebrates with the ATP World No.1 trophy after
winning his group stage match against Greece's Stefanos Tsitsipas
Action Images via Reuters/Tony O'Brien
On Wednesday he was 5-1 down in the third set against Medvedev but
found an escape route. Then on Friday he was a set down against
strutting Greek stylist Tsitsipas before unleashing a furious
onslaught to claim victory.
His hopes of winning the ATP Finals title for the first time was
over for another year but matching Federer and Djokovic's five
year-end top spots was consolation.
"I think this trophy is the work of the whole year, a great year in
all terms," Nadal, who first achieved it in 2008, told reporters.
"This trophy with me is a big personal satisfaction.
"There have been some demoralising moments this year in terms of
physical issues. But super happy for everything.
"The big gap between the first until today, 11 years, is a big
thing. I don't know if somebody did it or not, but is something
difficult."
Nadal said he was honoured to match Federer and Djokovic and pointed
out that had it not been for injuries he might already have
surpassed Pete Sampras's six year-end number ones.
"I cannot complain, but at some point I feel that there is a couple
of years out there that I have been in a position that I had chances
to be the number one and I got injured and I could not fight for
it," he said.
(Reporting by Martyn Herman, editing by Pritha Sarkar)
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