Spanish world No. 9 David Ferrer stormed to the Rio Open men’s singles title on Sunday, battering Italian Fabio Fognini 6-2, 6-3 in a one-sided final.
Fognini, ranked 28th in the world, had edged out titleholder and clay king Rafael Nadal in his semi-final 24 hours earlier, but had no answer to Ferrer as the second seed sped past him in 1 hour, 23 minutes.
Ferrer added his second title of the season after Doha last month to keep the Rio crown in Spanish hands after Nadal’s success in the inaugural event last year.
“It’s been a very special week for me,” Ferrer said after taking his record against Fognini, the Australian Open doubles champion, to a perfect 8-0.
Ferrer and Nadal had joined Brazil’s now-retired former world No. 1 Gustavo Kuerten at the Sambadrome during last week’s carnival festivities, before getting down to the serious business of swapping their samba shoes for finding their clay-court rhythm in humid conditions.
“I promise next year I will learn how to dance samba,” Ferrer said as he addressed the crowd.
For Fognini, there was the compensation at least of a first win over Nadal, making him feel as good as if he had actually won the title.
“Sorry David, nothing against you, but I beat the king of clay,” Fognini said.
Ferrer took the joke in good heart.
“You said you beat the king of clay, but the king of clay is right here, it’s Guga Kuerten. Rafa still has time for such accolades,” the new champion said.
Ferrer was the more consistent as his booming serves put Fognini in difficulty and although the Italian attacked the net, he was quickly on the back foot.
In the fourth game of the opener, Fognini saved a pair of break points as he came back to deuce, only to serve up two double faults.
A second break in the eighth game saw Ferrer land the opening set in 37 minutes.
The second brought no respite as the 32-year-old Spaniard underlined his dominance to net his 23rd ATP World Tour title in his 48th final.
Meanwhile, Nadal heads for Buenos Aires this week looking to push along preparations for a 10th Roland Garros crown in June.
Earlier on Sunday, Italian top seed Sara Errani scored a 7-6 (7/2), 6-1 win in the women’s singles final over Slovakian sixth seed Anna Karolina Schmiedlova.
The win moves Errani up to the fringes of the top 10 — she rose from 16th to 12th in the new rankings yesterday.
“It is always special to play here — I love playing on clay,” Errani said.
“I’ll be back here I hope for the Olympics [next year], but it’s a pity they won’t be on clay,” added Errani, noting that the Olympic tournament will be a hard-court event falling shortly before the US Open.
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