Nadal delivers glory for Spain as
Davis Cup starts new era
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[November 25, 2019]
By Martyn Herman
MADRID (Reuters) - Spain's talisman
Rafael Nadal sealed a sixth Davis Cup title for his country on
Sunday when they beat Canada 2-0 in the final of the revamped event.
After a week of relentless tension and late-night heroics it was
perhaps asking too much for the first final in the Davis Cup's new
guise to deliver a classic and so it proved as Spain became the last
nation standing of the 18 who assembled in Madrid.
With Spain's King Felipe watching on, the 33-year-old Nadal fought
off Canadian youngster Denis Shapovalov 6-3 7-6(7) to give Spain
their first title since 2011.
If any player deserved to get his hands on the famous old trophy
again it was Nadal after he worked overtime all week, often into the
small hours, to win all eight matches he played.
But he surely would have been happy had it been team mate Roberto
Bautista Agut to have delivered the winning point.
Bautista Agut had given the hosts a flying start, beating Felix
Auger-Aliassime 7-6(3) 6-2 after returning to the squad following
the death of his father.
"An amazing week in every way," said Nadal, who has now won 29
successive Davis Cup singles matches since 2004. "The vital person
has been Roberto Bautista."
After beating Auger-Aliassime, Bautista Agut was embraced by his
captain Sergi Bruguera and there were emotional scenes at the end as
roars of "Campiones" echoed around the arena.
"It was a dream day and all the team members have made an incredible
effort, especially Rafa, going to sleep at three, four and five in
the morning and the next day going out to play," Bautista Agut said.
"It can only be because we are Spanish."
SHAKIRA SINGS
For Gerard Pique, the Barcelona soccer player who has made revamping
the Davis Cup into a tennis World Cup his mission, it was the
perfect climax to a week in which the new format suffered glitches
but could be judged a qualified success.
Too many late nights, one session finishing at 4.07 a.m., a
complicated group stage and tiny crowds at some ties mean there is
still lots to improve if the $80 million Pique's Kosmos company is
investing in the event each year is sustainable.
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Spain's Rafael Nadal takes a selfie with team mates after winning
the Davis Cup final REUTERS/Sergio Perez
But Sunday felt like an authentic Davis Cup final, even if an
appearance from Pique's pop singer wife Shakira added a little more
glamour than usual.
Once the tennis began it quickly became apparent that Canada captain
Frank Dancevic's decision to change his lineup for the first time
all week might have backfired.
Vasek Pospisil, ranked 150, had been outstanding all week, beating
Italy's 12th-ranked Fabio Fognini and American Reilly Opelka in the
group phase, taking down Australia's John Millman in the
quarter-finals and partnering Shapovalov to a deciding doubles
victory over Russia in the semi-final.
Auger-Aliassime, who has been out with an ankle injury, was given
his first call of the week but was outplayed by a rock-solid
Bautista Agut, who rejoined the squad on Saturday.
That left Shapovalov seemingly facing mission impossible and his
only chance was Nadal's tank being dry.
Having come this far there was no chance Nadal would falter -- not
with 25,000 Spaniards roaring at every whipped winner.
When he took the opening set with a single break it was all feeling
a little anti-climactic for the neutrals but Shapovalov injected
some late drama into the proceedings.
The Canadian's serve began to click and his groundstrokes finally
took the zip out of Nadal's legs.
Incredibly Nadal showed mercy at 6-4 in the tiebreak, failing to put
away a short forehand, and Shapovalov arrowed a winner down the
line. The Canadian, cheered on by hundreds of his countrymen, saved
another match point then had a set point of his own but Nadal
averted the danger with a heavy serve.
Nadal got to a third match point and this time Shapovalov could not
fight back.
(Reporting by Martyn Herman; editing by Clare Fallon)
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