- Fonseca wins NextGen, hopes to continue legacy of past champions
- Ricky’s picks for the 2025 Nitto ATP Finals field
- Jenson Brooksby Opens Up on Living with Autism
- Players React to Jakub Menšík Mid-Match Doping Test
- Roland Garros Reveals 2025 Tennis Poster Art
- Simona Halep Receives Australian Open Qualifying Wild Card
- Happy Holidays from 10sBalls Team: Our Wish For You and Yours!
- Sabalenka, Swiatek, Paolini Commit to Dubai Tournament
- Ricky’s picks for the 2024 NextGen ATP Finals in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia
- Tennis Star Genie Bouchard suffers An Eye Injury Playing Pickleball
- Stringlet: Serving Up Tennis Inspiration With A Twist
- Michael Russell Makes History as 2024 ATP Coach of the Year
- 2024 Stefan Edberg Sportsmanship Award winner: Grigor Dimitrov
- BNP Paribas Open Voted ATP and WTA 1000 Tournament Of The Year For 10th Consecutive Time
- Holger Rune Commits to ABN AMRO Open, Director Richard Krajicek Announces
Rafa Nadal And Roger Federer Race For Tennis ATP Number One • Either Way Nike Wins
- Updated: October 14, 2017
By Francisco Resendiz
Roger Federer dotted the sideline sealing a pulsating comeback conquest of Rafael Nadal in the Australian Open final that signaled the rebirth of the Roger vs. Rafa rivalry.
Hitting his hard-court stride, Nadal is determined to cross the season-ending finish line first.
Nine years after he first finished as year-end No. 1 for the first time, Nadal is aiming to complete the feat for the fourth time in his career.
If he does it, the 31-year-old Spaniard would equal Novak Djokovic’s mark of holding the year-end top spot four different times.
Nadal, who arrived in Shanghai holding a 2,370-point lead over the second-ranked Federer in the rankings, is energized by the quest to finish No. 1.
“That happens, will be I think a very important achievement for me, no?” Nadal told the media in Shanghai. “Will be No. 1 four times in my career end of the season with so many years of difference I think is something very difficult.
“But remain work to do. I have probably one of the toughest opponents that you can have to achieve that thing, and especially in this part of the season. He likes to play in the surfaces that we’re gonna play, indoor, and here that the court is very fast. So probably he is maybe more favored than nobody else, these kind of surfaces.”
Federer, who has finished as year-end No. 1 five different times, said his goals shifted after the US Open.
“Because he’s playing so well, it’s going to make things more difficult, but after he won the US Open, clearly (regaining No. 1) was not the goal,” Federer said. “The goal was always to stay healthy and stay in the chase possibly, you know, but I know that if I want to finish world No. 1 I’ve got to win here and World Tour Finals and Paris and Basel, whatever it may be.
“It becomes more and more unlikely, which is totally fine, because I never entered this season with the goal being world No. 1. It was really unfortunate for me that I hurt myself in Montreal, because then that would have been a cool race maybe going on in Cincinnati, even if I would have lost, and then into the US Open feeling better. Unfortunately it never happened.”
Traditionally, the indoor environment has presented the most challenging conditions to Nadal, who sometimes feels rushed trying to unleash his sweeping backswings on the faster indoor track.
Varying his serving location and applying his net game helped Nadal snap a three-year hard-court title drought winning his third US Open title. Riding a 15-match winning streak into the Shanghai semifinals, Nadal explains his hard-court success this season simply: consistency.
“When you are playing well, everybody talks about improvements or things that you are doing different,” Nadal said. “At the end of the day of course I try to improve my game. But the sport is not that difficult: If you are playing well, then you have more chances to win a lot of matches. If you are playing worst, the chances are much less. This year I have been playing well almost every week. That’s why I have been having lot of success.”