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Australian Open Capsules: Djokovic outlasts Nadal in longest final
MELBOURNE, Australia (AP) — A look at Sunday's final day of the Australian Open tennis championships:
WEATHER: Late showers, high of 95 degrees.
ATTENDANCE: Single session: 20,930. Tournament attendance: 686,006 (event record, previous mark 653,860 in 2010).
WINNERS: Men's singles: Novak Djokovic. Mixed doubles: Bethanie Mattek-Sands, United States, and Horia Tecau Romania.
RUNNERS-UP: Men's singles: Rafael Nadal. Mixed doubles: Elena Vesnina, Russia, and Leander Paes, India.
STAT OF THE DAY: 5:53: time in hours and minutes of Sunday's final, the longest in Grand Slam history by 59 minutes.
QUOTE OF THE DAY: "You're going through so much suffering, your toes are bleeding. Everything is just outrageous, you know, but you're still enjoying that pain" — Djokovic after winning the longest match in Australian Open history.
Results
The Associated Press
Sunday
At Melbourne Park
Melbourne, Australia
Purse: $26.83 million (Grand Slam)
Surface: Hard-Outdoor
Singles
Men
Championship
Novak Djokovic (1), Serbia, def. Rafael Nadal (2), Spain, 5-7, 6-4, 6-2, 6-7 (5), 7-5.
Doubles
Women
Championship
Bethanie Mattek-Sands, United States, and Horia Tecau (8), Romania, def. Elena Vesnina, Russia, and Leander Paes (5), India, 6-3, 5-7, 10-3 tiebreak.
MELBOURNE, Australia (AP) — Novak Djokovic ripped off his shirt and let out a primal scream, flexing his torso the way a prize fighter would after a desperate, last-round knockout.
This was the final act in Djokovic's 5-7, 6-4, 6-2, 6-7 (5), 7-5 victory over Rafael Nadal in the Australian Open final — a sweat-drenched, sneaker-squeaking 5 hour, 53-minute endurance contest that ended at 1:37 a.m. Monday morning in Melbourne.
Djokovic overcame a break in the fifth set to win his fifth Grand Slam tournament and third in a row. None, though, quite like this. This one involved tears, sweat and, yes, even a little blood. It was the longest Grand Slam singles final in the history of pro tennis and it came against Nadal, the player who built a career on his tenacity — on outlasting opponents in matches like these.
"It was obvious on the court for everybody who has watched the match that both of us, physically, we took the last drop of energy that we had from our bodies," Djokovic said. "We made history tonight and unfortunately there couldn't be two winners."
When the drama was finally over at Rod Laver Arena, the 24-year-old Djokovic joined Laver, Pete Sampras, Roger Federer and Nadal as the only men who have won three consecutive majors since the Open Era began in 1968. Nadal was his vanquished opponent in all three.
Djokovic will go for the "Nole Slam" at Roland Garros in May.
As the players waited for the trophy presentation, Nadal leaned on the net, while Djokovic sat on his haunches. Eventually, a nearby official took pity and they were given chairs and bottles of water.
Nadal held his composure during the formalities, and even opened his speech with a lighthearted one-liner.
"Good morning, everybody," he said.
A few minutes earlier, after hugging Nadal at the net, Djokovic tore off his sweat-soaked black shirt and headed toward his players' box, pumping his arms repeatedly as he roared. He walked over to his girlfriend, his coach and the rest of his support team and banged on the advertising signs at the side of the court.
"I think it was just the matter of maybe luck in some moments and matter of wanting this more than maybe other player in the certain point," Djokovic said. "It's just incredible effort. You're in pain, you're suffer(ing). You're trying to activate your legs. You're going through so much suffering your toes are bleeding. Everything is just outrageous, but you're still enjoying that pain."
The match was full of long rallies and amazing gets. Djokovic finished with 57 winners, along with 69 unforced errors. Nadal had 44 winners against 71 unforced errors.
Laver was part of the 15,000-strong crowd when the players walked on at 7:30 p.m. Sunday to flip the coin and start the warmup. He was still there, along with most of the crowd, after 2 a.m. for the trophy presentations.
Djokovic called it the most special of his five Grand Slam wins.
"This one I think comes out on the top because just the fact that we played almost six hours is incredible, incredible," he said. "I think it's probably the longest finals in the history of all Grand Slams, and just to hear that fact is making me cry, really.
"I'm very proud just to be part of this history."
It went so long because Nadal refused to yield. He was trying to avoid becoming the first man to lose three consecutive Grand Slam finals — and seeing his losing streak in finals stretch to seven against Djokovic, who beat him for the Wimbledon and U.S. Open titles and took his No. 1 ranking last year.
After a grueling four-set loss to Djokovic at Flushing Meadows last year, Nadal said that, indeed, he may have found a slight opening — a glimmer of hope for next time against the player who dominated the 2011 season and had dismantled him time and again over the year.
This one was, in fact, closer, though not necessarily because of any strategic changes, but rather, because Rafa summoned up the heart to take this one the distance.
Nadal stayed in the contest for almost every point, sprinting from one side of the court to the other, chasing down balls and making Djokovic work extra time for the victory. But in the end, the same man was holding the trophy.
Nadal thought his win in the 2008 final against Federer was the best match he's played, but gave Sunday's match a top place in his personal rankings nonetheless.
"This one was very special," he said. "But I really understand that was a really special match, and probably a match that's going to be in my mind not because I lost, no, because the way that we played."
Djokovic had his off moments during this two-week tournament Down Under. He appeared to struggle for breath in his quarterfinal win over No. 5 David Ferrer and again during his five-set semifinal win over No. 4 Andy Murray. He blamed it on allergies, and he managed to control it better against Nadal.
Yet, at times in the final, he looked as if he couldn't go on.
When Nadal fended off three break points at 4-4 in the fourth set to win the game, spectators jumped to their feet and chanted "Rafa, Rafa, Rafa, Rafa!" Djokovic had lost the momentum. Play was stopped moments later when rain started to fall and a suddenly animated Nadal threw his arms up in disbelief and walked slowly back to his chair. The stadium roof was then closed.
Djokovic picked up his game after a 10-minute break and his pockets of supporters waved their Serbian flags again and started their own competing chant of "Nole, Nole, Nole" — inserting Djokovic's nickname where "Ole" belongs in the tune and rhythm of the Spanish soccer chant.
It wasn't enough to get him through the tiebreaker in the fourth set, though, when Nadal won the last four points to finish it in 88 minutes. Nadal dropped to his knees on the baseline and pumped his arms at that point, celebrating as if he'd won the final. All he'd done was prolong it. This pair had never gone to five sets.
Just as he did during the first set, Djokovic took off a white shirt and replaced it with a black one.
It didn't seem to help immediately as he went down a break and a defeat loomed.
The match clock hit 5 hours with the score 2-2 in the fifth. Nadal won the next point and Djokovic started to stumble slightly, unsteady on his feet.
Nadal held that game without losing a point and then broke Djokovic for a 4-2 lead.
The turning point came in the next game, when Nadal had an open court but knocked a backhand volley wide down the line. He challenged the call, but the ball was clearly out. Instead of being up 40-15 and one point from a 5-2 lead, the game score became 30-30.
Djokovic found energy again and got a break point with a backhand that forced an error from Nadal. He pounced on a Nadal second serve to convert the break as the match clock ticked to 5:15, confirming it as the longest match in the history of the Australian Open. Nadal had that record, at 5:14, in his five-set semifinal win over fellow Spaniard Fernando Verdasco in 2009.
This match had already long surpassed Mats Wilander's win over Ivan Lendl at the 1988 U.S. Open, in 4:54, as the longest final in the terms of duration.
Djokovic started to look better physically and Nadal started to make some unforced errors, giving the Serbian some extra seconds between points to get his heavy breathing under control. After getting back on serve at 4-4, Djokovic kissed the crucifix around his neck twice.
With Nadal serving, the pair engaged in a 31-shot rally that Nadal finally won when Djokovic committed a backhand error. The Serb fell flat on his back on the court, fully stretched out, arms over his head, while Nadal doubled over on his side of the court, hands perched on his knees.
It appeared Djokovic was ready to throw in the towel, but he said he never thought about staying down.
"At that point I was just thinking of getting some air and trying to recover for next point," he said. "Thousand thoughts going through the mind. Trying to separate the right from wrong. Trying to prioritize the next point. I'm playing against one of the best players ever — the player that is so mentally strong. He was going for everything or nothing."
When Djokovic got the break to go up 5-4, the Serbian fans jumped up with their flags and screamed while the rest of the crowd sat in stony silence.
After kissing the crucifix around his neck repeatedly in the later games, Djokovic openly prayed out loud and looked upward as he got within points of sealing his victory.
"I was trying find every possible help and energy that I possibly can," he said. "It paid off I guess."
Notebook: Turning point: One backhand proves crucial for Nadal
MELBOURNE, Australia (AP) — The turning point in the longest men's final ever at a Grand Slam came when 10-time major winner Rafael Nadal went for a bit too much on a backhand after more than 5 hours on court.
Novak Djokovic outlasted Nadal in 5 hours, 53 minutes to win a third Australian Open title, finishing off the 5-7, 6-4, 6-2, 6-7 (5), 7-5 win at 1:37 a.m. on Monday.
But it could have been so different.
At 30-15 in the seventh game of the fifth set, the top-ranked Djokovic was almost exhausted and didn't even try to continue the point when Nadal lined up a backhand with the court wide open, and skewed it slightly wide down the line.
Nobody could quite believe it — Nadal challenged the out call, but really only to regroup his thoughts. Instead of moving ahead 40-15, one point away from a 5-2 lead in the fifth set, the score became 30-30. Djokovic won the next two points and regained the momentum.
"It's true I had big mistake with 30-15," Nadal said. "But it's not moment to think about that. That's another just moment in an almost six hours match. Forget about that knowing that I really had real, very real chances to have the title and to win against a player who I lost (to) six times last year.
"But I didn't. I never put him in this situation during 2011, all 2011, so that's another positive thing for me."
Nadal has now lost seven straight finals to Djokovic, including the last three majors. No other man has lost the finals at three consecutive majors. Nadal didn't see Sunday's loss as a negative.
"I didn't have mental problems today against him," Nadal said. "I had in 2011 all these mental problems. Today I didn't have. I compete with normal conditions against him, no?
"So that's another positive thing. Probably never say that many positive things after I lose."
Nadal came to the Australian Open in 2011 aiming for a "Rafa Slam" after winning the French, Wimbledon and U.S. Open titles in 2010. He was eliminated in the quarterfinals. At the French Open, Djokovic has the chance to win four consecutive majors, something no man has done since Rod Laver completed the Grand Slam in 1969.
ANOTHER EPIC: Nearly four years ago, Nadal was on the winning end of another epic major final — a 6-4, 6-4, 6-7 (5), 6-7 (8), 9-7 victory over Roger Federer at Wimbledon in 2008.
He says he ranks his five-set loss to Novak Djokovic in the Australian Open final on Sunday alongside that Wimbledon match as two of the most memorable he has ever played.
Nadal came up short against Djokovic 5-7, 6-4, 6-2, 6-7 (5), 7-5 in a nearly 6-hour contest at Melbourne Park that didn't finish until early Monday morning.
It evoked memories of his Wimbledon final against Federer, which was equally dramatic and tense, though not nearly as long. The Spaniard finished off Federer in a paltry 4 hours, 48 minutes.
"For me it was a little bit more special, the 2008 (Wimbledon final)," Nadal said with a smile at his post-match news conference. "But I really understand that (tonight) was a really special match, and probably a match that gonna be in my mind not because I lost, no, because the way that we played.
"That means that I did a lot of things well to compete against best players of the world and winning on them, losing on them, but always having tough matches. And final 2008 Wimbledon and this one was very special."
Just because it was special, though, doesn't mean Nadal wants to ever sit through it again. When asked if he'd ever watch the match on video, he replied: "Too long. Highlights only."
DOUBLES TROUBLE: To hear Leander Paes and Radek Stepanek lavish praise on one another after winning the Australian Open men's doubles title on Saturday night, it's hard to believe they've only played together four times.
Paes and Stepanek defeated American brothers Mike and Bob Bryan 7-6 (1), 6-2 to win the title — the seventh Grand Slam trophy for the Indian doubles specialist, and the first for the Czech player.
The duo first teamed up at Delray Beach in 2004, where they made off with the title. They played together two years later in Rome, and then not again until partnering up for an Australian Open tuneup event in Sydney earlier this month.
Stepanek said after Saturday's match that they were supposed to play together in 2005, but he called it off so he could focus on his singles game.
"I had to pick up the phone and tell Lee honestly that, you know, my whole career, whole life I worked on my singles, and I wanted to, you know, give myself a shot," he said.
When asked whether Paes was angry, Stepanek deadpanned: "I believe inside he got very mad."
Seven years and one Grand Slam trophy later, there are no hard feelings. In fact, the two couldn't stop rhapsodizing about one another's talents at their lengthy post-match news conference.
"This guy's legs are as fast as mine, if not faster," said Paes, who lost in the mixed doubles final with Elena Vesnina on Sunday. "He can jump higher than me. I'm not a bad athlete, but this guy is a super agent."
The feeling of adoration is apparently mutual.
"I'm listening like a 5-year-old kid to his idol," Stepanek said. "I saw in his eyes that his eyes are eating every word of mine. I felt the respect that's what, you know, what are you giving from the heart."
-- Dennis Passa
Australian Open final longest in major history
MELBOURNE, Australia (AP) — Novak Djokovic's 5-7, 6-4, 6-2, 6-7 (5), 7-5 victory over Rafael Nadal in the Australian Open final was the longest men's Grand Slam final in terms of duration, the ATP said Sunday.
— The time of 5 hours, 53 minutes included a 10-minute delay while the roof on Rod Laver Arena was closed due to rain. That time was included because the match was not officially suspended.
— The previous longest men's Grand Slam final was 4:54 when Mats Wilander defeated Ivan Lendl in five sets at the 1988 U.S. Open.
— The previous longest men's final at the Australian Open was in 1988 when Mats Wilander defeated Pat Cash in five sets in 4:27.
— The previous longest match at the Australian Open was 5:14 when Rafael Nadal defeated Fernando Verdasco in five sets in the 2009 semifinals.
— The longest men's match in history is American John Isner's 6-4, 3-6, 6-7 (7) 7-6 (3), 70-68 first-round defeat of Nicolas Mahut at Wimbledon in 2010 which lasted for 11 hours, five minutes.
Mattek-Sands, Tecau win Australian mixed title
MELBOURNE, Australia (AP) — American Bethanie Mattek-Sands and Romanian Horia Tecau won the mixed doubles title at the Australian Open on Sunday, beating Elena Vesnina and Leander Paes 6-3, 5-7, 10-3.
It was the first Grand Slam victory for the 26-year-old Mattek-Sands, known as much for her eccentric on-court attire as her tennis. For the final, she wore a lime, one-sleeve top, black skirt, black knee-high socks, purple streaks in her hair and her regular eye black on her cheeks. Tecau also captured his first Grand Slam title. He has lost twice before in the men's doubles final at Wimbledon.
Paes, a 38-year-old doubles specialist from India, was playing in his second championship match in as many days. He won the men's doubles trophy with Radek Stepanek on Saturday night.
Other Tennis News
Men's rankings unchanged at top after Australian Open
MELBOURNE, Australia (AP) — The status quo has been maintained at the top of the men's rankings after Novak Djokovic's dramatic win over Rafael Nadal at the Australian Open, unlike the situation on the women's tour.
Official rankings to be released Monday show Djokovic maintaining the No. 1 spot on the ATP Tour after winning his third major in a row. Djokovic's 5-7, 6-4, 6-2, 6-7 (5), 7-5 victory in 5 hours, 53 minutes was the longest Grand Slam final in professional tennis.
Victoria Azarenka moved to No. 1 on the women's tour with her first Grand Slam title, an emphatic win over Maria Sharapova on Saturday. Caroline Wozniacki dropped from No. 1 to No. 4, with Wimbledon champion Petra Kvitova remaining in second spot and Sharapova moving up one place to third in the rankings.
U.S. Open champion Sam Stosur, who lost in the first round at Melbourne Park, moves into fifth from sixth despite the poor result at her home major, while Agnieszka Radwanska moves to a career-high No. 6.
Marion Bartoli of France moves up to two places seventh, while Vera Zvonareva is No. 8, Li Na ninth and Andre Petkovic, who withdrew from the Australian due to a stress fracture in her back, remains at 10.
Li dropped four places from fifth after she lost in the fourth round to defending champion Kim Clijsters in a rematch of the 2011 final. Li had a high number of ranking points to defend as a losing finalist in 2011.
Clijsters, who lost in the semifinals to Azarenka this year at Melbourne Park, is projected to drop to 30th from 11th.
Serena Williams, who lost in the fourth round, will remain at No. 12.
The only change in the men's top 10 is at No. 10, where 2009 U.S. Open champion Juan Martin del Potro replaces Nicolas Almagro.
Nadal remained at No. 2 after losing his third straight Grand Slam final — all of them to Djokovic.
Roger Federer, who lost to Nadal in the Australian Open semifinals, remains in third place, followed by Andy Murray, who lost to Djokovic in the semifinals.
David Ferrer is fifth, Jo-Wilfried Tsonga sixth, Tomas Berdych seventh, Mardy Fish eighth and Janko Tipsarevic ninth.
-- Dennis Passa



