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Ferrer Puts Spain 2-0 Ahead After Nadal Blitz Back To Main

04-Dec-2011

 The News 

SEVILLE, Spain: Rafael Nadal thrashed Juan Monaco and David Ferrer rallied to fell Juan Martin Del Potro in five thrilling sets to give Spain a 2-0 lead over Argentina in the Davis Cup final on Friday that put the favourites on the brink of a fifth title.

Playing on his beloved clay before a rowdy crowd at the Olympic Stadium, Nadal got Spain’s bid for a third trophy in four years off to a predictably solid start with a 6-1, 6-1, 6-2 destruction of 26th-ranked Monaco, the world number two’s training partner.

As night fell over the Andalucian capital, the tenacious Ferrer fought back from two sets to one down to beat Del Potro 6-2, 6-7, 3-6, 6-4, 6-3 after almost five hours of attritional tennis and send the red and yellow clad home support into raptures.

“That was the match that we wanted from our side,” Argentina captain Tito Vazquez told a news conference. “We were very close but not close enough. It’s very difficult.

“For us we have to start thinking about tomorrow, about winning the doubles, and then who knows.

“Maybe Del Potro recovers, he is capable of beating Nadal. You never know, we could be back in the game but it’s a difficult task.”

Ferrer came close to losing his unbeaten record in Davis Cup singles matches on clay, but clawed his way back against the big-hitting but erratic Del Potro to extend his winning run to 12 on the surface.

The world number five stuttered when he was broken serving for the match at 5-1 up in the decider but secured victory at the second attempt two games later with a crashing forward winner that caught the baseline.

“I don’t have a serve of 200 kilometers an hour and I don’t have a volley like (Roger) Federer but I’m in shape,” Ferrer told a news conference. “I had to be almost perfect otherwise I wouldn’t have won.”

Needing to win doubles and Sunday’s two reverse singles in the best-of-five tie, Argentina face a seemingly impossible task to secure a first Davis Cup trophy in their fourth final with Nadal apparently unbeatable on the red dust.

The muscular Mallorcan clubbed 27 winners on the specially constructed indoor court, which straddles the running track a tone end of the arena, 20 of them on his fearsome forehand.

Nadal told a news conference he tried to lift Monaco’s spirits in the dressing room after the match.

“He hasn’t played that bad as to get that result but it’s just I have made very few mistakes,” the 10-times grand slam champion said.