Roger Federer came
through an epic five-set encounter with Rafael Nadal to win his fifth
Australian Open title and the 18th Grand Slam of a record-breaking career.
The Swiss veteran came
from a break down in the final set to seal an incredible 6-4, 3-6, 6-1, 3-6,
6-3 victory, further extending his record as the most successful male tennis
player of all time.
Roger
Federer kisses the trophy after winning his Men’s singles final match against
Rafael Nadal. Photograph: Issei Kato/Reuters
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Federer Beats Nadal
In Australian Final To Win 18th Major
Associated
Press reports that Roger Federer has won his 18th Grand Slam title and put some
extra distance on the all-time list between himself and Rafael Nadal, the man
he beat 6-4, 3-6, 6-1, 3-6, 6-3 in a vintage Australian Open final on Sunday.
It
was the 35-year-old Federer's fifth Australian title, his first at a major
since Wimbledon in 2012, and it reversed the status quo against his nemesis,
Nadal.
Federer
had lost six of the previous eight Grand Slam finals he'd played against Nadal,
and had only previously beaten the left-handed Spaniard in 11 of their 34
matches.
Both
players were returning from extended layoffs for injuries — Federer the left
knee; Nadal the left wrist — and were seeded 17th and ninth respectively.
Nadal
remains equal second with Pete Sampras on the all-time list, with the last of
his 14 majors coming at Roland Garros in 2014.
After
four sets where the momentum swung alternately from one player to the next, the
fifth had all the tension and drama that these two players are famous for.
Nadal
went up an early break and it seemed as if the injury time-out Federer needed
after the fourth set may have been an indicator of things to come.
But
the Swiss star rallied, and broke back in a pivotal sixth game and took control
in a period when he won 10 straight points.
Nadal
saved three break points in the eighth game but lost momentum again when
Federer finished off a 26-shot rally — the longest of the match — with a
forehand winner down the line.
Consecutive
forehand errors gave Federer the pivotal break for 5-3, but Nadal made him work
for the very last point.
Serving
for the match, Federer had to save two break points with an ace and a forehand
winner.
At
deuce, he was called for a double-fault but challenged the out call on his
second serve. The call was overturned, and he got to play two.
Not
long after, he fired an ace to get his second match point and hit a forehand
crosscourt winner to finish off.
His
celebrations were delayed, though, when Nadal challenged the call. Federer
watched the replay on the tournament screen, and leaped for joy when it showed
his last shot was in. His 100th match at the Australian Open ended with his
fifth title at Melbourne Park.
No
two players had met more often in Grand Slam finals in the Open era, and Nadal
had previously dominated. But they hadn't met in a major final since the 2011
French Open, won by Nadal.
Three
months ago, they were both on breaks when Federer joined Nadal in Mallorca for
the opening of the Spaniard's tennis academy and the pair joked about ever
being able to contend for majors again.
Yet
here they were, first Grand Slam tournament of the season, renewing the classic
rivalry that saw them dominate tennis a decade ago.
The
long-odds final — No. 9 against No. 17 — unfolded after six-time champion Novak
Djokovic was shockingly upset by No. 117-ranked Denis Istomin in the second
round and top-ranked Andy Murray, a five-time losing finalist in Australia,
went out in the fourth round to left-handed serve-volleyer Mischa Zverev.
Federer beat Zverev in the quarterfinals and U.S. Open champion Stan Wawrinka in an all-Swiss semifinal to reach the championship match. The six years between his Australian titles set a record, too, longer than the five years that both Boris Becker and Andre Agassi had between championships in Melbourne.
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