Nadal hands Federer worst Slam loss in 11 years to reach 12th French Open final

Roger Federer's French Open return was ended at the semifinal stage by Rafael Nadal, who is one match away from a 12th French Open title.

Published : Jun 07, 2019 19:23 IST , Paris

Rafael Nadal celebrates after defeating Roger Federer in the 2019 French Open men's singles semifinal clash.
Rafael Nadal celebrates after defeating Roger Federer in the 2019 French Open men's singles semifinal clash.
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Rafael Nadal celebrates after defeating Roger Federer in the 2019 French Open men's singles semifinal clash.

Defending champion Rafael Nadal powered past Roger Federer in the French Open semifinals on Friday, to move within one victory of a record-extending 12th Roland Garros title after handing his oldest rival his worst Grand Slam defeat in 11 years.

The 33-year-old produced a masterful performance to get past Federer 6-3, 6-4, 6-2 in the last four on Court Philippe Chatrier and set up a final clash with either world number one Novak Djokovic or Austrian fourth seed Dominic Thiem on Sunday.

It will be Nadal's 12th appearance in the championship match, which he has never lost before.

“In front (of me was) probably my biggest rival in my career with all the story that we shared together,” said Nadal. “So that always makes the match a little bit more special and unique.”

The third seed now has an stunning 92-2 win-loss record on the Paris clay, having beaten Federer for the sixth time in as many French Open meetings despite difficult, windy conditions.

“This court can be windy, can be difficult,” added Nadal. “Today was a little bit too much. So difficult to control the situation and understand the things that were going on on court.”

RELATED | AS IT HAPPENED — Rafael Nadal's defeat of Roger Federer

Nadal also leads his overall head-to-head against Federer 24-15, and 14-2 on clay after ending a run of five straights losses to the 37-year-old.

He could also move to within two of Federer on the all-time Grand Slam title winners' list with an 18th major on Sunday.

A tally of just nine games meant it was Federer's heaviest defeat in a Grand Slam match since managing only four against Nadal in their famously one-sided 2008 Roland Garros final.

Nadal made only 19 unforced errors, crushing 33 winners as Federer struck 25, although that amount could easily have been doubled against any opponent other than the 11-time champion.

The defeat leaves Federer still waiting for a first victory over Nadal on clay since 2009 in Madrid.

It was 2009 champion Federer's first French Open campaign since 2015, after skipping the clay-court season for two years in order to be better prepared for Wimbledon.

“I think I surprised myself maybe how deep I got in this tournament and how well I actually was able to play throughout,” he said.

- Topsy-turvy start -

A topsy-turvy start saw the Spaniard race through the first three games before Federer broke back as the wind played havoc with the players' serves from one end.

But Nadal grabbed a 4-2 advantage in a marathon sixth game as Federer, looking to become the oldest Grand Slam finalist since Ken Rosewall at the 1974 US Open, dumped a forehand into the net.

The crowd were roaring on Federer as he saved a set point, but gasped in appreciation of a rasping Nadal backhand winner which clinched the opening set.

The Swiss turned on the style to take the first two games of the second set, only to be broken straight back as Nadal curled a trademark forehand up the line.

Federer was throwing everything he had at Nadal, but the indomitable left-hander was simply too strong.

READ | WTA chief scathing of women's semifinal scheduling

The key moments came towards the end of the second set, when second seed Nadal managed to hold under severe pressure to level at 4-4, before putting the pedal down to break despite having trailed 40-0.

The defending champion confidently served out the set to love to move one step closer to the final, where he will look to lift the trophy for a third successive year.

Federer's chances were slipping away quickly, and he received a warning after angrily hitting the ball into the upper reaches of Philippe Chatrier after a flick off the net chord helped Nadal break in game three of the third set.

Another break in Federer's next service game effectively signalled the end of the contest, and Nadal wrapped up an impressive victory as his rival fired a return long.

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