Rafael Nadal swats aside Kei Nishikori to seal record-breaking 11th Monte Carlo crown

Rafael Nadal became the first man to win a tournament 11 times in the Open era with his 76th ATP Tour triumph. Nadal's 31st Masters title is also an outright record, pulling him out of a tie with Novak Djokovic. (AFP)
Updated 22 April 2018
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Rafael Nadal swats aside Kei Nishikori to seal record-breaking 11th Monte Carlo crown

  • Nadal saw off Nishikori 6-3, 6-2 to become the first man to win a single tournament 11 times in the Open era
  • Nadal’s 31st Masters title is also an outright record, pulling him out of a tie with Novak Djokovic

Monte Carlo: Rafael Nadal romped to a record-extending 11th Monte Carlo Masters title by brushing aside an outclassed Kei Nishikori in Sunday’s final to retain the world number one ranking.
The 31-year-old saw off Nishikori 6-3, 6-2 to become the first man to win a single tournament 11 times in the Open era with his 76th ATP Tour title.
Nadal’s 31st Masters title is also an outright record, pulling him out of a tie with Novak Djokovic.
The 16-time Grand Slam champion’s era of utter dominance on clay looks unlikely to end any time soon after Nadal took his run of consecutive sets won on the surface to 36.
The Spaniard will next set his sights on an 11th Barcelona Open victory next week, and it is hard to see anyone preventing him from extending his record number of 10 French Open titles at Roland Garros at the end of the clay-court season.
He was pushed by Japan’s Nishikori early on and fell a break down, but roared back against an opponent who already appeared beaten midway through the first set.
It was still an excellent week for former world number four Nishikori, who only returned from a four-month absence with a right wrist injury in January and will rise from his current ranking of 36 to the brink of the top 20.
Nadal got on the board with a strong service hold, before quickly putting Nishikori under pressure as a flicked passing shot brought up break point.
But the Spaniard missed a forehand up the line by a matter of millimeters, with Nishikori clinging on after an 11-minute game that left him looking physically exhausted.
But that hold showed Nadal, who first won the event in 2005, that his opponent was up for the fight.
The top seed was even displaying rare signs of nerves, and Nishikori broke for a 2-1 lead with a backhand up the line after a Nadal double fault.
But he failed to build on that glimmer of an opening, double faulting himself on break-back point.
That costly error knocked the early aggression out of the 28-year-old’s groundstrokes, and Nadal sped through the next two games to take command of the first set.
Nishikori forced a break point in the seventh game but fired long with the court wide open as Nadal kept his nose in front.
He struggled a little to serve out the opener, but although Nishikori saved one set point with an exquisite backhand volley, Nadal clinched it on the second with a punch of the air celebrating a pair of blistering forehands.
Nishikori was staring down the barrel of defeat at the start of the second set, but staved off a break point to hold serve.
But the last rites had long been written, and Nadal broke to 15 in each of the Japanese’s next two service games to close on victory.
The greatest player to ever step foot on a clay court secured his 24th Masters title on the surface with a venomous backhand that flew past the hapless Nishikori.


Verstappen fumes ‘whole day a disaster’ after Shanghai struggles

Updated 2 sec ago
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Verstappen fumes ‘whole day a disaster’ after Shanghai struggles

  • A fuming Max Verstappen said Friday was “a disaster” after torrid practice and sprint qualifying sessions at the Chinese Grand Prix
SHANGHAI: A fuming Max Verstappen said Friday was “a disaster” after torrid practice and sprint qualifying sessions at the Chinese Grand Prix.
Verstappen’s Red Bull was almost two seconds behind championship leader George Russell’s Mercedes as he finished in eighth place in both sessions in Shanghai.
The Red Bulls struggled for pace again on the second race weekend of the season with their new in-house power units having replaced Honda as engine supplier.
They are also clearly far from getting to grips with the sweeping new aerodynamic and chassis regulations as Formula One enters an era of a 50-50 split between conventional and electrical power.
“The whole day has been a disaster pace-wise: no grip — I honestly think that is the biggest problem — no grip, no balance,” said an angry four-time world champion Verstappen, whose best lap was a colossal 1.734 sec adrift of Russell.
“(We are) just losing massive amounts of time in the corners and then of course because of that you start to trigger other little problems.
“But the biggest problem for us is that the cornering is completely out.”
His teammate Isack Hadjar fared even worse, he was 10th, barely scraping into the top-10 shootout in sprint qualifying.
It prompted Red Bull team principal Laurent Mekies to apologize to Verstappen.
“Sorry, Max,” said Mekies over team radio at the end of the session.
“Tough one, a lot to learn. The weekend is still long, we need to learn from (it). Let’s try again.”
Verstappen, who fought back from a qualifying crash in the opening race in Australia last weekend to finish sixth from 20th on the grid, was at a loss as to the way forward.
“I don’t know at the moment what we can do. We’ll see,” said the Dutchman.