Alcaraz powerless as Nadal and Tsitsipas eye number one spot

Rafael Nadal meets fans during the presentation of players at the Nitto tennis ATP Finals in Turin, on Friday. (AP)
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Updated 12 November 2022
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Alcaraz powerless as Nadal and Tsitsipas eye number one spot

  • Nadal will hope he has shaken off the rustiness he displayed in Paris when he lost in his first singles match in two months
  • The third-ranked Greek, who is in the Red Group, needs to win all his matches on his way to the title

TURIN, Italy: Carlos Alcaraz will spend a nervous week watching the ATP Finals as Rafael Nadal and Stefanos Tsitsipas bid to usurp the Spanish teenager as year-end men’s world number one.
The top-ranked Alcaraz is powerless to stop his rivals because he is out with an abdomen injury he suffered at the Paris Masters over a week ago.
Nadal will hope he has shaken off the rustiness he displayed in Paris when he lost in his first singles match in two months after spending time at home in Mallorca with his wife and newborn son. The 36-year-old fell to American journeyman Tommy Paul.
The surest way for Nadal, who won the Australian and French Open titles in 2022 and is ranked second, to finish year-end number one for a sixth time is by winning the title in Turin.
Yet he is seemingly unconcerned about joining Pete Sampras in second on the all-time list of year end number ones.
“Like I’ve often said, it’s not a priority for me anymore, because you need a consistency of results that is really only possible for the younger players,” he told the Gazzetta dello Sport.
“And to be honest I don’t like talking about what could happen in the future.”
Nadal could also top the rankings if he wins all three of his Green Group games and reaches the final while Tsiptsipas stumbles.
The third-ranked Greek, who is in the Red Group, needs to win all his matches on his way to the title.
Nadal would topple US Open champion Alcaraz if the two Spaniards finish level on points. Nadal has a better overall record in the Grand Slams and Masters tournaments
Nadal opens his campaign on Sunday against big-serving American Taylor Fritz. His other two group rivals are Norwegian Casper Ruud and in-form Canadian Felix Auger-Aliassime.
Tsitsipas, who has never been higher than third, has a very different attitude to Nadal.
“The rankings are there for a reason. They signify something important,” he said in August when he regained third spot.
“I think that the very next step would be the No. 1 spot, which I hope I can get to one day.”
The 24-year-old has enjoyed a successful year with two titles and five other finals, though a Grand Slam title still eludes him.
Were he to succeed in finishing number one he would emulate Chilean Marcelo Rios in 1998 as the only players without a Grand Slam crown to top the rankings.
Tsitsipas’s task appears harder than Nadal’s as his group contains two former world number ones in Serbian Novak Djokovic and Daniil Medvedev.
Another Russian the exciting mop-haired Andrey Rublev — a quarter-finalist at both the French and US Open this year — makes up that quartet.
Djokovic is hoping his rollercoaster of a year — starting with his expulsion from Australia because he was not vaccinated against Covid to the high of another Wimbledon crown — ends happily.
The 35-year-old Serb is targeting equalling the retired Roger Federer’s record of six ATP Finals titles.
It would be “a perfect ending,” Djokovic told ATP Media on Friday.
“The cherry on the cake, for sure, but it’s a long way. It’s a long week.”
“It’s the last week of the year on the Tour, it’s kind of a last sprint, if you will, for all of us.
“From the very first match you are going to have extra high intensity.”
For Ruud the finals present a chance to capture a significant title after losing both the French and US Open finals. He faces added pressure as his two grandmothers will be in Turin to watch him.
“They don’t come to too much,” Ruud told the ATP website.
“Sometimes they are a little bit frustrated with me that I don’t invite them too often.
“They are great, but as all grandmothers, they can maybe be a bit too much at times,” he added smiling.


McIlroy wins BBC Sports Personality of the Year after Masters and Ryder Cup victories in 2025

Updated 6 sec ago
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McIlroy wins BBC Sports Personality of the Year after Masters and Ryder Cup victories in 2025

  • The 36-year-old McIlroy won the public vote for the BBC prize ahead of England’s Women’s Rugby World Cup-winning star, Ellie Kildunne, and new Formula 1 world champion Lando Norris
  • McIlroy attended the BBC ceremony in Salford and said on stage: “2025 has been the year that I made my dreams come true. “From Augusta to the Ryder Cup and everything else in between, it really has been the year that dreams are made of“

SALFORD, England: Rory McIlroy was voted as the BBC Sports Personality of the Year on Thursday, capping a year that saw him win the Masters to complete the career Grand Slam and then an away Ryder Cup with Team Europe.

The 36-year-old McIlroy won the public vote for the BBC prize ahead of England’s Women’s Rugby World Cup-winning star, Ellie Kildunne, and new Formula 1 world champion Lando Norris.

He is the first golfer to win the award since Nick Faldo in 1989 — the year McIlroy was born.

McIlroy came close to winning the accolade in 2014, losing out to F1 driver Lewis Hamilton despite capturing the British Open and PGA Championship titles that year.

His win at Augusta National in April, in a playoff against Justin Rose, was his first major title since then and meant he became the sixth male golfer to complete the Grand Slam.

This year, McIlroy also won The Players Championship, his home Irish Open and a fourth straight Race to Dubai title, which crowned him as the year’s No. 1 player on the European tour.

However, his other biggest victory came in a team event when he contributed 3 1/2 points for Europe in its win over the US in the Ryder Cup at Bethpage Black. It was Europe’s first away win in 13 years.

McIlroy attended the BBC ceremony in Salford and said on stage: “2025 has been the year that I made my dreams come true.

“From Augusta to the Ryder Cup and everything else in between, it really has been the year that dreams are made of.”