ATP Finals: 'Super focused' Dominic Thiem overpowers Rafael Nadal

Austrian holds nerve to win 7-6, 7-6 at London's O2 Arena

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Dominic Thiem held his nerve to claim an impressive 7-6, 7-6 win against Rafael Nadal at the ATP Finals as the Austrian moved to the brink of a place in the semi-finals on Tuesday.

Thiem over-powered Nadal behind closed doors at London's O2 Arena to put a dent in the Spanish star's bid to win the ATP Finals for the first time.

The world No 3, who defeated reigning champion Stefanos Tsitsipas in his opening game, has won his first two matches in this year's tournament as he looks to go one better than last year's runner-up finish.

Thiem will be guaranteed a semi-final place if Tsitsipas beats Russian seventh seed Andrey Rublev in Tuesday's other tie.

“I think it was a great match from the first to the last point,” Thiem said in an on-court interview. “I was pretty lucky to get that first set. I was 2/5 down in the tie-break. Against Rafa, it is nice to win the first set but he is still there 100 per cent from the first to the last point.

"I knew that maybe I had a slight advantage when I won the first set, but I still had to stay super focused.”

The 27-year-old has already enjoyed a year to remember, reaching two Grand Slam finals and winning one of the four majors for the first time when he defeated Alexander Zverev in the US Open final in September.

While Thiem eyes a last four berth, Nadal will have to beat Tsitsipas in his last group match to keep alive his hopes of reaching the semi-finals.

Nadal saw off Rublev in straight sets in his first match on Sunday, but the 34-year-old was unable to cope with Thiem's power and poise.

Now Nadal has to do it the hard way if he is to land the biggest prize missing from his trophy cabinet after losing the 2010 and 2013 finals at the prestigious season-ending event.

Nadal, who last month equalled Roger Federer's record of 20 Grand Slams by winning the French Open, has won 86 titles but just one of those has come on an indoor hard court.

The world number two has qualified for the ATP Finals for 16 years in a row, but his record at the eight-man elite event pales in comparison with Federer and Novak Djokovic after six injury withdrawals.

Tennis - ATP Finals - The O2, London, Britain - November 17, 2020 Spain's Rafael Nadal reacts during his group stage match against Austria's Dominic Thiem REUTERS/Toby Melville
Rafael Nadal reacts to a lost point at London's O2 Arena. AFP

Although Nadal had vanquished Thiem in two French Open finals, the Austrian had no reason to fear him, having beaten the Spaniard on his favourite clay surface three times and defeated him at the Australian Open this year.

This was their first meeting indoors and a hard-fought first set went down to a tie-break without either player facing a break point.

Nadal raced into a 5-2 lead in the breaker, but hit back to level at 5-5 before his first double-fault gifted the Spaniard a set point.

Nadal drove a backhand into the net to give Thiem a lifeline and the Austrian saved a second set point with a fierce forehand winner.

Matching Nadal blow for blow, Thiem earned his first set point and produced another blistering cross-court winner to clinch an intense 75-minute set.

“The match was at a very high level with all strokes,” said Thiem. “I am very happy with the way I served, because most of the time when I get the first serve in, I am on the offence and I have a good percentage to win the point. When I was in difficult situations like the first-set tie-break… the serve helped me out a lot. I think it is maybe the most important stroke in indoor tennis. I am very happy that it worked well.”

Nadal responded with the first break of the match, unleashing a thunderous winner down the line at 3-3 in the second set.

Even then, Thiem wouldn't be subdued and, holding his nerve in a brutal baseline duel, he grabbed his own first break in the next game.

Thiem had three match points at 5-4 after a series of Nadal errors, but the Spaniard recovered his focus to save all three, his escapology even drawing rueful applause from Thiem.

Once again a tie-break was required and for the second time, Thiem came out on top, bludgeoning Nadal into submission with his relentless power and accuracy.