By Ricky Dimon
The quarterfinal at the top of the U.S. Open draw was supposed to be a rematch of the 2017 final. Instead, it will be a rematch of the 2018 French Open final.
Defending champion Rafael Nadal took care of his business on Sunday afternoon in Flushing Meadows, but 2017 U.S. Open runner-up Kevin Anderson got bounced by Dominic Thiem. In what Thiem told the crowd was “one of my best matches ever,” he upset Anderson 7-5, 6-2, 7-6(2) after two hours and 37 minutes.
It was perhaps his absolute best match ever on a hard court, a surface on which he had previously been 0-6 lifetime against Anderson. Thiem, who had won just a single hard-court match since the first week of the season before he arrived in New York, won an awesome 41 of 45 first-serve points on Sunday and did not face a single break point. The South African’s winners-to-errors ratio (40 to 27) was strong, but Thiem’s was nothing short of amazing: 42 to 13 to be exact.
“I definitely felt he played a great match,” Anderson said of his opponent. “He made life pretty difficult for me. I thought he defended amazingly. There were pockets (during the match) where he had some unbelievable passing shots. I think overall I didn’t feel like I played poorly today. I think I did quite a few things well. Hat off to him. I thought he really stepped up.”
“First of all, I served really, really well today,” the Austrian noted. “Not the best percentage, but I almost [won] every point [on my first serve]. I didn’t face one break point and I didn’t feel so much pressure on service games.
“So it was a little bit easier to play the return games. I could change my return position, and this helped me a lot. And also the court, I think, made a big difference. It’s a huge court. I could go very far back like I do on clay usually.”
Up next for the ninth seed is Rafael Nadal, for whom a hard court was much different than clay in his head-to-head history with Nikoloz Basiliashvili. Nadal had trounced the underdog Georgian 6-0, 6-1, 6-0 at last season’s French Open, but this time Basilashvili put up a stern challenge before succumbing 6-3, 6-3, 6-7(6), 6-4 after three hours and 19 minutes.
Now it will be Nadal vs. Thiem for the 11th time, with the former leading the H2H 7-3 following his 6-4, 6-3, 6-2 triumph in the recent French Open final
“He’s a fantastic player,” Nadal said of Thiem. “He’s a very powerful player. He’s a great guy; very good relationship with him. Happy for him that he’s in quarterfinals here. Last year he lost a very tough match against (Juan Martin) Del Potro here. Yeah, in some way he deserve to be where he is. Gonna be a tough one.
“Yeah, I need to play my best match of the tournament if I want to keep having chances to stay in the tournament.”
Nadal says that before every match. Perhaps this time he actually means it.
Topics: 10sballs, 2018 US Open, Atp, Dominic Thiem, Kevin Anderson, New York, Nikoloz Basiliashvili, Rafael Nadal, Sports, Tennis, US Open tennis