Rafael Nadal on Sunday defeated his greatest rival Novak Djokovic 6-0, 4-6, 6-1 to win a ninth Internazionali d’Italia title and a record 34rd Masters, leaving his vanquished foe to label the Spaniard as “the No. 1 favorite for Roland Garros.”
World No. 1 Djokovic, winner at the Madrid Open the previous weekend, produced an error-strewn performance in his 54th meeting with world No. 2 Nadal, who claimed the 81st title of his career.
“Finally I have a title,” said Nadal after securing his first title of the season. “I’m happy to reach that level in the last tournament before a Grand Slam.”
Photo: Reuters
Djokovic had beaten Nadal in the final of the Australian Open this year for his third straight Grand Slam win after Wimbledon and the US Open.
Nadal overtakes Djokovic at the top of the list for Masters wins — the pair were level at 33 each before Sunday’s final — in a timely boost ahead of his assault on a 12th French Open crown in a week’s time.
“I’m really glad that I managed to get into the third set, considering the first set where I was blown away from the court,” Djokovic said. “The second set was obviously better. Had my chances in first couple games, I thought, in the third set. Then he ran away from me.”
After three semi-final defeats in Monte Carlo, Barcelona and Madrid, Nadal has returned to his best form ahead of Roland Garros.
“Nadal, No. 1 favorite, without a doubt, then everyone else,” Djokovic said of his predictions for Roland Garros.
The Spaniard dominated early, with Djokovic losing a set 6-0 for the first time to a player he describes as his “greatest rival,” but Nadal missed four break points in the second set, dropping his first set this week after losing serve at 4-5, to throw the Serb a lifeline.
The fightback was brief as the 31-year-old Djokovic dropped serve immediately in the third set, smashing his racket in frustration.
Nadal never looked back, sealing a third win over Djokovic in their five Rome finals, although the latter still holds a 28-26 career edge.
Nadal, the second seed, has not dropped a set all week en route to an 11th Rome final and his 50th in a Masters tournament.
“I played well, a great match in general terms,” Nadal said. “First set was a fantastic level of tennis. Second, too, but I lost a lot of opportunities to win that. When that happens against a player like Novak, you are in trouble. Just a little bit of nerves at the end of the second set, but the level of tennis has been high. A great match in all aspects, I’m so happy for that.”
Djokovic had played six hours in his previous two matches, saving two match points against Juan Martin del Potro on Friday last week.
“I was just running out of fuel a little bit today, but I started a bit slower,” four-time Rome winner Djokovic said. “I wasn’t as fresh in my legs. He used it. Just kind of missed that half a step, especially on the backhand side. He’s been playing some terrific tennis throughout the entire week. He was just too strong today.”
“It was a great week, considering I was one shot away to lose quarter-finals against Del Potro. To get to the finals is really a great result,” he added.
In the women’s singles final, Czech fourth seed Karolina Pliskova swept past Britain’s Johanna Konta 6-3, 6-4 for her 13th career title, which assured her the world No. 2 spot.
A break in each set was enough for the former world No. 1 to get past Konta, sealing victory on her third match point after 85 minutes on court.
“Before the tournament, I was not super confident,” said Pliskova, a 2017 French Open semi-finalist. “So it’s little bit like a miracle for me because clay is always tough.”
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