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Nadal shocked
in tennis Masters marathon
SHANGHAI—World number two Rafael Nadal was shocked in three marathon
sets by fellow Spaniard David Ferrer on Tuesday in the second surprise
result at the Masters Cup in as many days.
With top-ranked Roger Federer beaten on Monday, Nadal let slip a one-set
lead over his tenacious countryman who sealed it 4-6, 6-4, 6-3 in a
gripping round-robin encounter that lasted two hours and 40 minutes.
Ferrer, an outsider before the tournament, now has one foot in the
semi-finals after his straight-sets defeat of Novak Djokovic. The
third-seeded Serb was earlier eliminated after losing 6-4, 6-2 to
Richard Gasquet.
Nadal, who can still qualify for the semis, outlasted Ferrer in an
absorbing first set which saw five breaks of serve in the first six
games. Ferrer’s netted forehand finally ended the tussle in Nadal’s
favour after 55 minutes. The hard-working Ferrer had been broken in his
opening two games but made a better start to the second set, saving four
break points in a close-fought fifth game.
And it was Ferrer who went a break up, battering Nadal with a
super-aggressive forehand before the Mallorcan struck back for 5-4 with
a pair of unplayable backhands.
However Ferrer conjured two set points on Nadal’s serve and nailed the
second as his under-pressure opponent flighted a forehand long.
Ferrer was in the ascendancy and he converted his third break point,
gifted by a double-fault, for 3-1 in the third with a punishing forehand
winner. Nerves set in as he served for the set and Nadal capitalised to
gain a lifeline break back. However, Ferrer made no mistake when serving
at 5-3, collapsing to the court in joy as he sealed it with a backhand
pass. Earlier Djokovic slumped out after his second consecutive defeat,
spelling a disappointing end to his breakthrough season. The 20-year-old
Serb went down 6-4, 6-2 to Frenchman Richard Gasquet in a flat display
which rules him out of finishing among the top two in Gold Group.
“Considering the results I had this year, people expected me to do well
here in Shanghai. I was one of the favourites for the title,” Djokovic
said. “Obviously I probably burned out a little bit and had too much
pressure on me.”
The subdued Serb got off to a slow start and was a double break down
before showing signs of life, breaking back but still losing the set,
6-4. Djokovic, pounded by Gasquet’s big backhand, was struggling to hold
serve and he threw in the towel at 4-2 down in the second as the
Frenchman wrapped it up in one hour and 25 minutes. “I had a perfect
match. I played a lot of amazing shots with my backhand and everything,
so it was a really good match for me,” said Gasquet.—Agencies |