NADAL Defeats FEDERER in Hard-Fought 5-Setter Australian Final

by erichews | February 1, 2009 at 05:30 am
279 views | 26 Recommendations | 6 comments

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The Australian Open is the first of the four Grand Slam tournaments of the season, but it provided some of the best tennis you’re likely to see this entire year. Much of it was in this year’s men’s final between Spain’s Rafael Nadal and Switzerland’s Roger Federer, the number one and two ranked players in the world, respectively.

Much was at stake in this match for each man. Federer was hoping to match Pete Sampras’ Majors titles [14] and regain his number one ranking. Nadal was looking for his first Major hardcourt trophy.

In a 4-plus hour, slugfest, Nadal managed to prevail over Federer with nearly physics-bending shot-making coming from both sides of the net. The final match score: 7-5, 3-6, 7-6, 3-6, 6-2. In the end, the fresher Federer seemed to run out of the energy that many feared Nadal would, due to his marathon semi-final match less than two days prior against fellow countryman Fernando Verdasco.

Nadal-Federer is THE rivalry in tennis, now, and is starting to eclipse those of days gone, especially when they meet in Grand Slam finals such as this. These two bring to mind McEnroe and Borg or Sampras and Agassi. Of course, today’s tennis comes with very little net-play, more power, and one heck of a lot more racket technology. Don’t let any of the set-scores fool you, though. This was a battle all the way, with each man throwing his all into each shot, sometimes resulting in some spectacular misses, but in many more amazing hits.

Perhaps this rivalry is all the more fun to watch because Nadal and Federer are such a contrast of types. Federer, the debonair one, who seems to effortlessly produce precision and power with a flick of the wrist. And Nadal, the bronzed Hercules of the baseline, charging about the court like a scowling rooster. No matter who you are, you have a champ to root for when you watch these two.

Nadal, once thought of as a pure clay-courter, proved himself able to train and adjust for different surfaces with his Wimbledon win last year (also against Federer). Once again, on the hard courts of the Australian Open, he has shown us that no surface is beyond his skills, and he is a threat to win any tournament he cares to enter.

If you were lucky enough to catch this match live [starting at 3:30 am for this East-Coaster American], then you couldn’t keep your sleep-deprived eyes from it. If you missed it, it will be re-broadcast during normal waking hours on ESPN2 and most likely on many highlight reels to come.

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harringtola

Great writing about a really interesting match and rivalry. This was one of many matches for both men that was a nail biter. It is true this rivalry rises to the levels of the greats for tennis in years past. What really great news for the matches to come in the coming season. Thanks for the accounting.

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erichews

I always enjoy watching these two because they let it all hang out when they play each other. Actually, the Aussie Open was a great tournament all the way around, this year. I was a little disappointed in Safina's performance in the women's final, but I think that was largely nerves.

Thanks for the lovely comment and the recommendation, harringtola. I appreciate it.


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armchairsports

Managed to catch the first two sets from the West Coast... thanks for the recap. It seems like Federer's record tying 14th Grand Slam win will be the most difficult to come by. It seemed as though the Fed's serve let him down pretty spectacularly (although he still won the second set with a first serve % under 50). Nadal is so firmly in his head by now and seems to convert basically every beak point chance he has, I almost wonder who'll get to 14 Grand Slams first...

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erichews

You're most welcome and thank you for the comment.

I wonder about 14 slams, too. It'll be fun to watch them get there, though, I'm sure.

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JeffHuang

Great post. Im not the biggest tennis fan, but i actually stayed up to watch a bit of this match. The rivalry between the two is great for the game.

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erichews

Thanks for the compliment, Jeff. Yes, these two make me want to watch tennis again after quite a few years of ignoring it. A good rivalry can certainly rekindle an interest.

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