Synopsis
The 35-year-old defeated Matteo Berrettini in the semis by 6-3, 6-2, 3-6, 6-3

Spain’s Rafael Nadal celebrates after winning the men’s singles semi-final match against Italy’s Matteo Berrettini on day twelve of the Australian Open tennis tournament in Melbourne on January 28, 2022. (Photo: AFP)
Rafael Nadal marched into the final of the Australian Open to be just one match away from becoming the all-time men’s Grand Slam leader after overcoming Matteo Berrettini in the semi-final on Friday.
The 35-year-old Spanish great, seeded sixth, was too solid for the Italian seventh seed, winning 6-3, 6-2, 3-6, 6-3 in 2hr 55min, and will face either Daniil Medvedev or Stefanos Tsitsipas in Sunday’s final.
Nadal is level on 20 majors with his golden-era rivals Novak Djokovic, who was deported on the eve of the tournament, and Roger Federer, who is absent with injury.
It gives the Spaniard an opportunity to go clear at the top and add to his lone 2009 Melbourne Park crown in his sixth Australian Open final.
“For me it’s all about the Australian Open more than anything else, it’s an amazing event,” Nadal said.
“I have been a little unlucky during my career with some injuries and I played in some amazing finals here with some good chances against Novak in 2012 and Roger 2017, I was close a couple of times.
“I feel very lucky that I won once in my career in 2009, but I never thought about another chance in 2022.
“So I’ll just try to enjoy today’s victory and try my best in the final.”
It has been an extraordinary effort from Nadal at the year’s opening major, having to modify his game to compensate for a degenerative bone disease in his left foot that ended his 2021 season last August.
Read more: Crowd capacity restricted to 50 per cent during Australian Open
‘It means a lot’
He then caught Covid in December which, he said, made him “very sick”.
Yet Nadal brushed aside Berrettini’s challenge with precision shot-making, while last year’s Wimbledon finalist could not overcome his sluggish start.
The stark statistic confronting Berrettini was that Nadal had never lost in his 20 Grand Slam semi-finals after leading by two sets.
“I started the match playing great, the first two sets were one my best for a long time and I knew Matteo was a very solid player, very dangerous and I knew at some point in the third set he was going to go for his shots,” Nadal said.
“It means a lot to me to be in the final again here,” added Nadal who is now unbeaten in 10 matches to start the 2022 season after winning a warm-up event in Melbourne.
Nadal made the better start, breaking tentative Berrettini’s opening service game when the Italian’s backhand went wide.
Nadal solidly rolled through his service holds to claim the opening set on his fourth set point in 43 minutes.
Nadal was honing in on Berrettini’s backhand and got his reward with a double break to take a stranglehold on the second set.
He finished off a 10-stroke rally with a delicate slice that again exposed Berrettini’s backhand to consolidate the double break.
Berrettini, the first Italian man to play in the Australian Open semi-finals, raised his level in the third set.
He brought up his first break points in six sets in his two encounters with Nadal and broke with a forehand winner to 5-3 and served out to reduce the deficit to one set.
But the key break came in the eighth game of the fourth set, Nadal bringing up two separate break points and getting the crucial break when Berrettini netted a forehand before serving out for the match.
Wheelchair great Alcott bows out with Australian Open final defeat

Wheelchair great Dylan Alcott bowed out of tennis Thursday after losing the Australian Open final. Image AFP
Wheelchair great Dylan Alcott bowed out of tennis Thursday after losing the Australian Open final, drawing the curtain on a glittering career in which he became a prominent disability advocate.
The 31-year-old Australian, the most successful quad tennis player ever with 15 Grand Slam singles and eight doubles titles, announced his decision to quit before the tournament.
It followed his history-making exploits in 2021 when he completed the Golden Slam of winning all four quad singles majors and the Paralympics gold in the same year.
But the world number one, a prominent sporting and media figure in Australia, was unable to go out on a high, losing to second-seeded Dutchman Sam Schroder 7-5, 6-0 on Rod Laver Arena.
“I’m really the luckiest guy in the world, and I didn’t need to win today to realise that,” he said courtside, holding back tears.
Schroder paid tribute, saying: “Thank for your all that you’ve done. You’ve inspired so many people out there to get out and play sport.”
Retirement from the courts coincided with Alcott being named Australian of the Year on Wednesday, a role he pledged to use to keep changing perceptions of disability.
“My purpose is to change perceptions, so people with disability can live the lives they deserve to live, not just in sport, but in employment, in education, in film, on TV, in dating, going to bars, going to festivals,” he said.
“It’s the reason I get out of bed. It’s not to win gold medals or Grand Slams.”
During a lengthy sporting career, Alcott found success initially at the Paralympics in wheelchair basketball and was part of the gold-medal-winning Australia team at Beijing 2008 aged just 17.
He added a basketball silver in London four years later before switching to quad tennis for Rio 2016, winning gold in both singles and doubles.
In Tokyo in September he had to settle for silver in doubles but his singles gold set him up to complete the Golden Slam in New York just a week later.
As well as seven Australian Open titles, Alcott won the US Open three times (2015, 2018, 2021), Wimbledon twice (2019, 2021) and was a three-time Roland Garros champion (2019, 2020, 2021).
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