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Argentina Open 2015: Rafael Nadal’s nine-month title drought ends after victory over home favourite Juan Monaco
Rafael Nadal beats Juan Monaco 6-4, 6-1, to win first title since French Open 2014.
Buenos Aires, Mar 2: Rafael Nadal won his first title in nearly nine months, beating Juan Monaco 6-4, 6-1 to win the Argentina Open 2015. The 28-year-old’s triumph was his first since he won a ninth French Open title at Roland Garros last June. His 46th career claycourt title is the second-most all-time behind the 49 of Argentina’s Guillermo Vilas. It was Spaniard’s 65th career crown on all surfaces, moving him into sole possession of fifth place on the Open Era all-time list led by the 109 titles of American Jimmy Connors.
Most importantly, it showed Nadal is headed in the right direction. The Spaniard, who battled injury last year after his Roland Garros triumph, exited early in Qatar and fell in the quarter-finals at the Australian Open in January. He had fallen to fourth in the world after a semi-final loss to Italian Fabio Fognini in Rio de Janeiro last week, the first time he hasn’t figured in the top three since August 2013. With this win, he’s projected to return to third in the world, again overtaking Britain’s Andy Murray, who lost out to Croatian teenager Borna Coric in the quarterfinal of the Dubai Tennis Championships 2015.
“I’m coming off a season that has not been easy — injuries, accidents. The beginning of this year has been a bit tricky after some time out, but little by little we have found positive feelings,” said Nadal, who had to cope with wrist trouble and an appendectomy in 2014. The 14-time Grand Slam champion needed one hour and 26 minutes on court to notch his sixth victory over Monaco in as many meetings on clay. But the players had to wait out a two-hour rain delay before the match, and another 55-minute delay after both held serve for 1-1 in the opening set on the still slippery court.
“It was a tough day in the rain because no one knew what was going to happen. I am very thrilled to win here. From the first day I trained my best to achieve this goal. I’m very happy. I leave here with an unforgettable feeling and memory,” Nadal said. After securing a tight first set with a break of serve in the seventh game, Nadal stormed through the second.
He broke Monaco twice en route to a 4-0 lead, then broke him again in the final game, clinching the win on his first match point when Monaco sent a forehand long. Nadal, playing in the Argentinian capital for the first time in a decade, didn’t face a break point in the contest before a packed crowd that included Vilas and David Nalbandian, the last Argentinian player to win the Buenos Aires title. He was handed the trophy by Argentinian Gaston Gaudio, the 2004 French Open champion.
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