'Almost dead' Rublev battles illness to claim Madrid Open title

Rublev had lost four consecutive matches before arriving in the Spanish capital but came from a set down to beat his Canadian opponent

By AFP

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Russia's Andrey Rublev holds his trophy after winning the 2024 ATP Tour Madrid Open. — AFP
Russia's Andrey Rublev holds his trophy after winning the 2024 ATP Tour Madrid Open. — AFP

Published: Mon 6 May 2024, 12:35 AM

Andrey Rublev won the Madrid Open with a hard-fought 4-6, 7-5, 7-5 victory over Felix Auger-Aliassime on Sunday to secure his second title of the year, despite battling with illness.

The Russian world number eight said he was "almost dead every day" and could barely sleep this week after securing a career second Masters 1000 victory.


Rublev had lost four consecutive matches before arriving in the Spanish capital but came from a set down to beat his Canadian opponent.

The 26-year-old triumphed at the Hong Kong Open in January but struggled since before turning around his form in Madrid, dropping just one set on the way to what proved a tense final.


"I think it was an incredible match, Felix deserved (in) the same way as me to win today and we showed a great battle together, I think the most important thing was that the people enjoyed it," said Rublev on court.

"Our sport is like this, we cannot have both winners."

Rublev, who takes the Madrid crown from double champion Carlos Alcaraz whom he beat in the quarterfinals, said he had played despite feeling ill at times this week and hailed his doctors for helping him through.

"If you knew what I had been through in the past nine days you would not imagine that I would be able to win a title," he added.

"I was almost dead every day, I was not sleeping at night -- the last three, four days I didn't sleep."

Auger-Aliassime reached the final after his opponent Jiri Lehecka retired hurt in the semifinals and quarter-final opponent Jannik Sinner withdrew with a hip injury, with the ATP draw at the clay-court tournament struck by misfortune.

However the 23-year-old Canadian, ranked 35th in the world, gave everything he had in his first Masters 1000 final appearance.

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