Nadal vanquishes Alcaraz to set up Indian Wells ATP final with Fritz
Nadal, who claimed a record-setting 21st Grand Slam title at the Australian Open in January, improved to 20-0 in 2022.
The 35-year-old superstar was pushed all the way through three hours and 12 minutes by the 18-year-old aiming to follow in the footsteps of his childhood idol.
“A very tough afternoon against an amazing opponent,” Nadal said. “Mentally, I was there all the time. I fought, I believed, facing some very difficult situations during the match.
“Anything could happen, no? But I am through to the final.”
The array of shots and athleticism that have already stamped Alcaraz a star were on full display in a match that saw gusting winds buffet the players in the second set, sending debris skittering across the court and at one point forcing a readjustment of the billowing net.
His fearless start to the contest saw him take a quick 2-0 lead — fighting off five of the astonishing 17 break points he would face in the set in the second game.
Nadal won the next four games before surrendering his serve again, but he pocketed the set with another break in the 10th game.
Down 0-40, Alcaraz delivered a drop shot winner, a backhand volley winner and a service winner.
A forehand into the net gave Nadal another opportunity, which the former world number one squandered with an easy forehand miss. He’d make no mistake two points later, pocketing the set on his fifth opportunity.
Alcaraz again seized the initiative in the second set with a break for a 3-2 lead.
That launched a run of five straight breaks of serve, the last another marathon in which Nadal saved five break points and missed two game points before Alcaraz finally put him away.
Alcaraz, who had won just three games in his only prior career meeting with Nadal in Madrid 10 months ago, then calmly served out the set.
As the wind died down again, the third set saw both players hitting winners from every quarter of the court.
Nadal stepped up his attack, coming to the net more in a bid to end the rallies.
It was his forehand volley in the eighth game that gave Nadal a break and a 5-3 lead and he served it out with a love game.
“In the third I think I played much better,” Nadal said. “When the wind stopped a little bit I thought I need to play aggressive because if not Carlos is going to go for the shots and it is going to be in his hands.”
– Fritz in first Masters final – Nadal won his only prior meeting with Fritz in straight sets, in the final at Acapulco in 2020.
The 24-year-old American, ranked 20th in the world, ended Andrey Rublev’s 13-match ATP winning streak with a 7-5, 6-4 victory over the world number seven in the other semi-final.
Fritz is the first American man to reach the Indian Wells final since John Isner in 2012 and he’ll be vying to become the first US winner since Andre Agassi in 2001.
Fritz is into his first elite Masters 1000 final and in search of a second career ATP title after his victory at Eastbourne in 2019.
The Southern California native came out firing on all cylinders and seized a 3-0 lead in just 11 minutes.
Firing winners off both wings and punishing Rublev’s second serve, Fritz had a chance to go up 5-1, but Rublev managed to fight off three break points in a marathon game featuring eight deuces.
As Fritz served for the set at 5-2, Rublev broke him with a stinging service return winner to put the set back on serve, but Fritz broke again in the 12th to take the set.
In a fit of frustration after the error-strewn set, Rublev repeatedly punched his racquet head with his right hand, opening cuts on his knuckles that apparently prompted his medical time out.
Rublev lifted his game in the second set, but after failing to convert two break chances in the ninth game Rublev gifted the American a match point when he sent an easy forehand volley long. Fritz took full advantage with another crushing service return winner.
For all the latest Sports News Click Here