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You Wont Believe Who Won the Indian Wells Final

Indian Wells Final

Taylor Fritz couldn't help but scream. The pain was too intense. He couldn't put any weight on his right ankle and assumed he would have to withdraw on Sunday from the biggest match of his professional tennis career, against Rafael Nadal in the final of a big tournament that he seemed destined to one day win.

Fritz, the 24-year-old from Rancho Santa Fe,  hurt his right ankle in Saturday’s BNP Paribas Open semifinal and aggravated the injury during a warmup session that only lasted a few minutes Sunday morning. He limped around the players' lounge at the Indian Wells Tennis Garden before seeing a doctor, who numbed Fritz's right ankle and wrapped it in blue tape that peeked out from under his white sock. 

BNP

Instead of withdrawing, Fritz decided just moments before the match that he'd give the ankle a try against Nadal. That decision turned out to be the right one.

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Fritz won the first four games of the first set and, with the momentum and Southern California crowd in his favor, beat the 21-time Grand Slam champion, 6-3, 7-6(5), to become the first American to win an Indian Wells singles title since Andre Agassi in 2001.

I can't even begin to describe how ridiculous it is that I was able to play, Fritz said. I've never experienced worse pain in my life before a match.

Entering Sunday’s championship, Nadal was 91-37 in career finals with 11 straight wins since May 2019. Fritz was 1-5 in finals during his career. Prior to the match, Fritz was 0-8 all-time against the Big Three of Nadal, Roger Federer and Novak Djokovic. He's now 5-0 against top 10 players at Indian Wells. 

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In the mostly full 16, 100-seat Indian Wells stadium, Fritz became the first player to beat Nadal this season, snapping the Spanish tennis star’s 20-match win streak to start the 2022 season. Only Novak Djokovic has had a longer streak to start a season since the ATP Tour began in 1990.

With the victory, Fritz earns the first-place prize of $1, 242, 025 and Nadal gets the second-place check for $665, 330. Fritz will rise to No. 13 in the ATP rankings on Monday. 

It was a game-time decision, Fritz said. A lot of members of my team wanted me to not play the match. I'm never going to let them forget that.

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Fritz limped off the court Saturday following a win over seventh-ranked Andrey Rublev of Russia. Fritz said that he figured he'd sleep on it and that, like his body usually does, it would feel much better the next day. This time, though, it didn't. 

But it didn't really begin to hurt Fritz until he reached Stadium Court and tried to serve during his warmup. He planted his right foot and pain shot up his ankle. He cried out in anguish. 

It wasn't till I got on the court to warm up, Fritz said. Took one push-off step, like, hard, I literally screamed. I tried it twice more. Both times, like, the worst pain imaginable. I was really upset, basically almost crying because I thought I was going to have to pull out.

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On the Tennis Channel broadcast, Grand Slam champion Jim Courier said that tournament director Tommy Haas texted him Sunday morning to see if Courier had any tennis gear with him, just in case. Hass had gathered Grand Slam champions Pete Sampras John McEnroe and Djokovic for an impromptu doubles match for the fans after Nadal withdrew before his semifinals match versus Federer with a knee injury in 2019. 

But Courier wasn't needed after all. Fritz took the court not knowing what to expect and against the wishes of some members of his team, who feared he could worsen the condition of his injured ankle.

“That’s how much it means to him, ” said Tennis Channel commentator Paul Annacone, who has coached Fritz. “He’s going to be out here giving everything he’s got.”

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Fritz said that the ankle didn’t bother him too much once the match began. Fritz opened the match receiving and forced Nadal into a break right out of the gate. He then held serve, went up a double break and held serve again to take a 4-0 lead as Nadal’s 18 first-set unforced errors put him into an early hole.

Nadal

Nadal entered the match with his own health concerns. His chronic left foot condition had him thinking about retirement at the end of last year, and he said Saturday that he may have strained a pectoral muscle during his semifinal match versus Carlos Alcaraz.

Nadal took a rare medical timeout to meet with an ATP trainer before proceeding with the semifinal match. Then, during the first set Sunday, he met with an ATP doctor and physio during a break in play. Following the first set, Nadal walked off the court with a trainer.

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Only thing I can say is it's tough to breathe for me. Nadal said. I feel very, very -- when I try to breathe, it's painful and it's very uncomfortable.

But it's not the moment to talk about that honestly, even if it's obvious that I was not able to do the normal things today. That's it. It's a final. I tried. I lost against a great player.

After Nadal returned to the court, he seemed rejuvenated. With Nadal superfan Ben Stiller and tournament owner and tech mogul billionaire Larry Ellison among those watching courtside, the Spaniard held serve early in the second set, then went up a break to take a 2-1 lead in the set.

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The two went at each other, neither backing down despite their physical ailments, with the thousands inside Stadium 1 roaring after every big point.

But Fritz broke Nadal back to get back on serve and during a crucial fifth game the American made several acrobatic, even miraculous, shots to hold serve and move one step closer to victory. 

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Nadal saved a championship point in the 10th game to bring the score to 5-5, before Fritz saved three break points to hold serve and move the score to 6-5. Nadal then held to take the set to a tiebreak, where Nadal had been 4-0 during this tournament. 

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But as the set moved into the tiebreak, Fritz, ultimately, showed more resilience against one of the most resilient players ever to grace these hardcourts.

He took the early 1-0 lead when Nadal buried the ball into the net on a forehand, then took a 2-0 lead, crushing a forehand winner down the sideline. Nadal climbed his way back to take a 5-4 lead, but Fritz scored the next three points to put the match to bed. 

With the loss, Nadal, who turns 36 in June, fell just short of becoming the oldest men’s champion in BNP Paribas Open history and the third-oldest ATP Masters 1000 champion since the series started in 1990. Both records belong to Federer.

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Fritz has been coming to the Indian Wells tournament for as long as he can remember. His dad, former tennis player Guy Fritz, is the longtime tennis coach at College of the Desert and his mother is former top 10 player Kathy May. As a child, his parents brought him to the tournament, where he’d watch all the top players, including his all-time favorite, Argentina’s Juan Martin del Potro.

Guy Fritz would tell his son that one day he would win the tournament in Indian Wells, the fifth-largest in the world. The younger Fritz said that it was only recently that he finally believed it.

Fritz played juniors in the Easter Bowl at the Indian Wells Tennis Garden as a teenager. By 16, he was playing in the qualifiers at Indian Wells and by 18 he had reached the main draw.

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The Eye (2008)

The Indian Wells tournament was canceled in 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic, and last year’s event was rescheduled for October. Fritz entered that tournament ranked 39th in the world yet made a run to the semifinals. He lost to Nikoloz Basilashvili of Georgia but later said that his run at Indian Wells ignited a level of confidence that helped him reach the top-20 for the first time.

Fritz moved to 16th earlier this year, having built on that performance at Indian Wells with a finals appearance in St. Petersburg and a quarterfinal finish in Paris. Since October, Fritz has beaten five of the six top 10 opponents he has faced.

With his win Sunday, which gave him the second title of his career (Eastbourne 2019), Fritz is the youngest BNP Paribas Open men’s singles champion since Djokovic in 2011 and the youngest American to win the Indian Wells men’s singles title since Michael Chang in 1996.

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He’s also the first American to win an ATP Masters 1000 singles title since John Isner at Miami in 2018 and the youngest American to win an ATP Masters 1000 singles title since Andy Roddick at Cincinnati in 2006.

Kathy May and Guy Fritz were both in attendance Sunday for their son's historic win, not long after he had screamed out in pain, and in fear that he wouldn't be able to play. 

Guy Fritz remembered telling his son that he'd one day win this tournament and put his name next to many of the all-time the greats in men's tennis who've also won here. After the match, he embraced

Taylor Fritz Hands Rafael Nadal First Loss Of 2022 With Win In Indian Wells Final

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