Incredible season for Nadal

 

Incredible season for Nadal

Just as tennis fans were busy debating whether Roger Federer is the greatest player ever, Rafael Nadal provided further evidence that the Swiss star might not even be the best of his generation.

By (AP)

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Published: Thu 23 Dec 2010, 12:12 AM

Last updated: Mon 6 Apr 2015, 8:50 AM

Fifteen months after Federer became the sixth man in history to win all four Grand Slam titles, Nadal became the seventh in 2010 when he won the US Open, his third major in a row after the French Open and Wimbledon.

During a dominant season, the 24-year-old Spaniard wrested back the No 1 ranking from Federer, and racked up seven titles, including a record-breaking 18th Masters Series win. With an Olympic singles gold and two Davis Cup titles already in the bag, Nadal is fast running out of major prizes to win.

“It has been an incredible season,” Nadal said. “One of my best ever, if not the best.”

In an average season by his very high standards, Federer saw his streak of 23 Grand Slam semifinals ended by Robin Soderling at the French Open. He also fell in the quarterfinals to Tomas Berdych at Wimbledon, and then lost an epic semifinal match at the US Open despite holding two match points against Novak Djokovic.

Federer still managed to pick up the other two significant titles of the year at the Australian Open and ATP World Tour Finals, the latter with a series of dominant performances that hinted he is not quite ready to fade into the background.

Since 2004, Federer and Nadal have won 24 of the 28 Grand Slam titles and with the pair cleaning up again, there was a sense of familiarity — perhaps even staleness — about 2010.

Just as in 2009, Djokovic and Andy Murray lined up third and fourth in the rankings. Juan Martin del Potro, the winner of the 2009 US Open and the emerging star of that season, spent most of 2010 recovering from wrist surgery and ended it ranked No 257.

Djokovic may not lose any sleep over not adding to his lone Grand Slam win after he led Serbia to its first ever Davis Cup victory, beating France in the final. He described it as “our biggest success as individuals, as a team, as a country.” Italy, meanwhile, won the Fed Cup for the third time in five years, beating the United States in the final.

In the men’s year-end rankings, there were no teenagers in the top 100 and the only players to finish in the top 20 for the first time were Jurgen Melzer (age 29), Mardy Fish (29), Sam Querrey (23) and John Isner (25). That was far from Isner’s most memorable contribution to the year. That unraveled over 11 hours, 5 minutes at Wimbledon as he and French opponent Nicolas Mahut played the longest match in history over three days, with the American eventually winning 70-68 in the fifth set.


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