Nadal set to seal year-end No 1 spot after Federer pulls out of Paris Masters

Swiss master, who is also world No 2, says he needs rest after winning Basel tournament

SHANGHAI, CHINA - OCTOBER 15:  Roger Federer of Switzerland talk with Rafael Nadal of Spain during the award ceremony after the Men's singles final mach on day eight of 2017 ATP Shanghai Rolex Masters at Qizhong Stadium on October 15, 2017 in Shanghai, China.  (Photo by Lintao Zhang/Getty Images)
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Rafael Nadal will be crowned as the year-end world No 1 if he wins his first match at this week's Paris Masters, after Roger Federer withdrew from the tournament.

The two old rivals have both had stunning seasons, returning to form and fitness with two grand slam titles each.

But Federer, who could have still usurped Nadal at the top of the rankings with titles in the French capital and at the World Tour Finals in London, pulled out of the final event of the regular season to protect a back problem.

The 36-year-old Swiss said winning his eighth Swiss Indoors title on Sunday against Juan Martin del Potro left him unfit to play at the Bercy Arena.

"I am very sorry to have to pull out of the Paris Masters but my body needs a rest after Basel," he said. "I've played a lot of tennis this year and need to make sure I look after my physical well-being if I want to continue to compete at the highest level for years to come.

"I love to play at Bercy, it's a few times now that I've not played there. It's a tough one but they have to understand that it's for the cause of staying injury-free and healthy.

"I'd like to be fully fit for London and for 2018."

Top seed Nadal, who has a bye for the first round in Paris, just needs to win his opening second-round clash to secure the top ranking heading into next year.

The Spaniard, who claimed his 10th French Open title and the US Open crown to take his grand slam tally to 16 major titles this season, will start his campaign against either German serve-and-volleyer Mischa Zverev or promising South Korean Hyeon Chung.

Despite his love affair with the clay of Roland Garros, Nadal has never won the Paris Masters in five previous attempts at the indoor tournament.

The 31-year-old Spaniard's best effort came with a final defeat by David Nalbandian in 2007.

The hard courts at Bercy will also see the final two places for the World Tour Finals decided, with seven players still hunting a ticket to London.

Belgian David Goffin and US Open semi-finalist Pablo Carreno Busta hold the seventh and eighth spots.

But Sam Querrey, Kevin Anderson, Del Potro, Jo-Wilfried Tsonga and Lucas Pouille all remain in contention.

Former US Open champion Del Potro has made a stunning late charge after sitting 47th in the points standings only two months ago.

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Like with Nadal and Federer, Wozniacki credits rest for superb 2017

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The 29-year-old Argentine reached the semi-finals at Flushing Meadows, beating Federer on the way, before also making the Shanghai Masters last four and winning in Stockholm ahead of his runner-up effort in Basel.

That makes him the form man going into Paris, where he will play either Italian Paolo Lorenzi or qualifier Joao Sousa in Round 2.

Frenchman Pouille is also making a last-gasp bid for a place at the eight-man season-ending finals, after beating his compatriot Tsonga to win his third title of the year in Vienna on Sunday.

The 23-year-old player will have to at least make the final in front of his home crowd, but was given a boost when handed Federer's place in the draw.

Pouille, the only man to win tournaments on clay, grass and hard courts this year, is not seeded to face a top-10 player until the quarter-finals, where he is due to face Austrian fifth seed Dominic Thiem.