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Nalbandian
beats Nadal at Paris Masters
PARIS—David Nalbandian beat
Rafael Nadal 6-4, 6-0 Sunday to win the Paris Masters and clinch his
second straight Masters title after winning in Madrid last month.
The Argentine player broke Nadal in the ninth game of the first set and
three times in the second. He won the match with a forehand that bounced
off the net and landed inside the line.
“All week I was playing great, and I don’t know why the result was so
easy,” Nalbandian said. “After I broke him, I felt that I was playing
better than him. I play more relaxed, start hitting winners almost from
everywhere. That gave me confidence.”
Nalbandian beat the world’s two top players on his way to the title,
having knocked out top-ranked Roger Federer in the third round. He also
beat Nadal in straight sets in the Madrid quarterfinals.
“He played better than me,” Nadal said. “You have to congratulate him. I
could not play at my best.”
Nadal struggled with his serve in the second set, which lasted only 27
minutes. The three-time French Open champion won only 17 percent of his
second-serve points and had five winners to Nalbandian’s 25.
The Spaniard had both knees taped during the match and had not played in
a final since beating Stanislas Wawrinka to win the Mercedes Cup in
Stuttgart, Germany, on July 22.
It was Nadal’s first defeat in 26 matches in Paris, where he is 21-0 at
the French Open. He had also not lost a set 6-0 since losing the decider
to Federer in the Hamburg Masters final on May 20.
Nalbandian becomes the first player since Marat Safin of Russia in 2004
to win Madrid and Paris back to back. Before Madrid, Nalbandian had
reached only one quarterfinal in 15 tournaments this season and said he
was hampered by knee and back injuries for nearly six months.
“I was injured the first part of the year,” Nalbandian said. “So it
wasn’t very easy for me to come back and play good tennis.”
The win means Nalbandian is first alternate for the season-ending
Masters Cup in Shanghai, which features the top eight players in the ATP
race. Federer, Nadal, Novak Djokovic, Nikolay Davydenko, Andy Roddick,
David Ferrer, Fernando Gonzalez and Richard Gasquet will play in the
Masters Cup, which starts Nov. 11.—Agencies |