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Nadal rewrites history in Paris

Spanish teenager Rafael Nadal became the first man in 23 years to win the French Open on his debut when he put down the brave, injury-hit challenge of Argentina?s Mariano Puerta 6-7 (6/8), 6-3, 6-1, 7-5 in a thrilling final here on Sunday.

Published on: Jun 6, 2005, 19:24:00 IST
None | By , Paris
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Spanish teenager Rafael Nadal became the first man in 23 years to win the French Open on his debut when he put down the brave, injury-hit challenge of Argentina’s Mariano Puerta 6-7 (6/8), 6-3, 6-1, 7-5 in a thrilling final here on Sunday.

HT Image
HT Image

The fourth-seeded 19-year-old racked up his 24th successive win to take victory against his unseeded opponent who overcame a groin injury early in the final and then threw away three set points which would have taken the match into a final set decider.

The win also made the muscular Nadal the sixth youngest Grand Slam winner of the Open era. Swedish legend Mats Wilander, in 1982, was the last man to take the title on his first appearance here but Nadal had to call on all his resources to subdue fellow left-hander Puerta.

Nadal, who put out world number one Roger Federer in the semi-finals, got off to a flying start in front of the watching King Juan Carlos of Spain, breaking Puerta in the opening game to carve out a 2-0 lead.

He held for 3-1 but midway through the fifth game, and two break points down, the 26-year-old Argentinian called for the trainer and took an injury time-out to have his thigh bandaged.

Puerta bravely saved those break points, shrugged off the injury to level the set at 3-3 and then edge ahead 4-3, dictating the play from the baseline.

Mindful of his injury and fatigue, he opted to go for broke from the back of the court and it paid off as he took the first set to the tiebreak which he secured after 72 minutes when Nadal could only hit wide.

Constant pressure from Nadal gave him the first break of the second set to lead 3-1.

A tiring Puerta saved a set point in the eighth game but was powerless to prevent Nadal from levelling the final with a sweeping forehand with the clock standing at 1hr 53min.

Puerta, bidding to keep the title in Argentinian hands after Gaston Gaudio’s victory in 2004, was beginning to pay for his first set heroics as Nadal broke again in the first game of the third set.

Mariano Puerta squandered three break points of his own in the fourth game and was made to pay as Nadal unleashed another driven forehand to break again and lead 4-1.

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