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Nadal faces Federer at Madrid final

RAFAEL Nadal and Roger Federer will meet for the first time since the Australian Open final for the Madrid Open title after Nadal saved three match points to beat Novak Djokovic 3-6, 7-6 (5), 7-6 (9) yesterday.

Nadal and Djokovic, playing their fourth match this year, needed a Masters Series record 4 hours, 3 minutes to separate at the Magic Box tennis center.

Top-ranked Nadal's 33rd straight win on clay lifted him into his seventh final this season, but he will carry a right knee injury into today's match with No. 2 Federer, who beat No. 5 Juan Martin del Potro 6-3, 6-4 in their semifinal.

Federer has lost his last five matches against Nadal, including the finals at the French Open, Wimbledon and Australia in February, when the Swiss player was in tears after the defeat.

"What's important for me is to get past that semifinal hurdle that I haven't been able to get past in the last couple of months," Federer said ahead of their 16th meeting in a final. "I feel like playing him anywhere is a challenge. The extra flair here is that it's in Spain."

Earlier, top-ranked Dinara Safina beat Switzerland's Patty Schnyder 6-4, 6-2 to set up a final against Danish teenager Caroline Wozniacki, who put away former No. 1 Amelie Mauresmo 7-6 (1), 6-3.

Nadal, who won in the Spanish capital in 2005 when the event was played on indoor hard court, is 9-1 on clay against Federer, who should at least carry a physical advantage into their finale after a trouble-free semifinals win.

"What I'm worried about is recovering in time and playing well. If I don't, I won't win," said Nadal, who hasn't lost on clay in over a year.

Federer didn't doubt Nadal would be in top shape for the pair's first match in Spain.

"They asked me the same question in Australia. It didn't really," said Federer, who faced Nadal after he had won a grueling five-set match against Fernando Verdasco. "(Tonight) was a best-of-three match and not a best-of-five. I think with the adrenaline and the crowd he's going to be the Rafa we know tomorrow."

It's the mental aspect that Federer will have to prepare best for as he comes face-to-face with Nadal for the first time since the Spaniard denied him a chance to equal Pete Sampras' record of 14 Grand Slam wins.

Djokovic was also left red-eyed after feeling in control for most of yesterday's match.

"It's frustrating when you play so well and you can't win," No. 4-ranked Djokovic said.

Nadal complained of discomfort in his right knee before the match, which hampered his ability to move as he made uncharacteristic errors that allowed for an early break in the first set.

Nadal had his leg wrapped in the second set before leveling.

In the deciding tiebreaker, Djokovic watched Nadal hit forehand winners down the near line to save his first two match points. The Serb then beat Nadal with a passing shot to save a match point of his own.

But leading 9-8, Djokovic sent the ball out and then netted on Nadal's next match point to end the longest three-set match in the history of Masters tournaments, the ATP level below the Grand Slams.

"I love these matches, it's very special to play these matches," said Nadal, who improved to 27-1 in clay semifinals. "If I don't fight here (in Spain), when am I going to fight?"

Despite hitting 50 unforced errors against Djokovic, Nadal's perseverance paid off as always as he rallied the 12,500 spectators with crucial winners to reach his 26th clay-court final. He has won 25 of those.

Djokovic, who missed a chance to take the No. 3 ranking from Andy Murray, added his latest loss to Nadal to those recently in the Olympics, the Davis Cup, and finals at Monte Carlo and Rome.

"I played one of my best on this surface, so ... I don't think you need my comments, you saw everything," Djokovic said. "A couple of points decided the winner."

Federer improved to 5-0 against del Potro, who has yet to take a set off the former No. 1.

Federer fired eight aces and kept the 20-year-old Argentine off-balance by repeatedly coming to the net to score 34 winners, including the needed break point across each set that was enough for victory.

Federer will be going for his 15th Masters title - and first in nearly two years - which would allow him to equal the 22-year-old Nadal's tally. Only Andre Agassi has won more with 17.

Safina, coming off a victory at Rome, reached her fifth final of the season by staying undefeated in four meetings against 20th-ranked Schnyder.

The ninth-seeded Wozniacki, who hasn't dropped a set this week to reach her third final of the season, saved two set points before rallying to take the first and then clinched it on her second match point when Mauresmo hit long.



 

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