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Ricky Dimon Breaks Down Each Player’s Most Important Match That Decided 2017 Nitto ATP World Tour Finals Fate
- Updated: November 10, 2017
Roger Federer of Switzerland celebrates winning against Rafael Nadal of Spain during the finals of the Men’s Singles at the Australian Open Grand Slam tennis tournament in Melbourne, Victoria, Australia, 29 January 2017. EPA/TRACEY NEARMY
There always seems to be that one match on which players–and their fans–can look back and think how different things may have been had it gone the other way. Some cases, of course, are more extreme than others. But all of the Nitto ATP World Tour Finals qualifiers, and those who missed the cut, had at least one match that played a part in deciding his London fate.
Ricky takes a look at the eight WTF participants and players 9-15 in the race who came close.
1. Rafael Nadal
Madrid Masters SF: Nadal vs. Novak Djokovic 6-2, 6-4
From a ranking points standpoint, a loss to Djokovic in the Madrid semifinals would not have been a huge deal. But mentally, it could have been crippling. Nadal went into the showdown on a horrific seven-match losing streak against Djokovic. Finally, though, the demons were erased. The Spaniard won the match, captured the title, dominated basically the entire clay-court swing, and never looked back in 2017.
2. Roger Federer
Australian Open F: Federer d. Nadal 6-4, 3-6, 6-1, 3-6, 6-3
Like Nadal, Federer was never not going to qualify for the World Tour Finals. But the Swiss eliminated even the most remote of possibilities that 2017 would be a down year for him when he won the first Grand Slam title of the season. After surviving five-setters earlier in the event against Kei Nishikori and Stan Wawrinka, Federer had his back against the wall in the final after dropping the fourth set and trailing by a break in the fifth. But he stormed back to beat Nadal and was thus off to the races.
3. Alexander Zverev
Rome Masters F: Zverev d. Novak Djokovic 6-4, 6-3
Back-to-back losses at the hands of Nick Kyrgios in Indian Wells and Miami plus some bad draws (Nadal in the third round of the Australian Open and Monte-Carlo) halted the Zverev’s progress. Halted no more. Zverev captured his first Masters 1000 title by upsetting Djokovic in the Rome final, and from there he took off. The 20-year-old’s hard-court summer included back-to-back wins in Washington, D.C. (500) and Montreal (another 1000). He underwhelmed at the majors, but that pain was eased by his two Masters 1000 triumphs.
4. Dominic Thiem
Barcelona SF: Thiem d. Andy Murray 6-2, 3-6, 6-4
Barcelona kicked off a stretch in which Thiem’s results were runner-up, runner-up (Madrid), semis (Rome), and semis (Roland Garros). The Austrian outlasted Murray after two hours and 15 minutes in the Barcelona semifinals, giving himself a shot at Nadal in the title match. He lost that one to Nadal, but any experience against the clay-court GOAT on his playground is a productive one. Sure enough, Thiem pulled off a clay-court upset of Nadal three weeks later in Rome.
5. Marin Cilic
Wimbledon QF: Cilic vs. Gilles Muller 3-6, 7-6(6), 7-5, 5-7, 6-1
Missing basically the entire hard-court summer did not matter much thanks to the impressive work Cilic put in during the short grass-court swing–semifinals of ‘s-Hertogenbosch, final of Queen’s Club, and final of Wimbledon. The Croat may have been preparing for a quarterfinal test with Nadal at the All-England Club, but instead it came in the form of Muller. Cilic just barely passed it after three hours and 30 minutes before going on to topple Sam Querrey in the semifinals.
6. Grigor Dimitrov
Cincinnati Masters F: Dimitrov d. Nick Kyrgios 6-3, 7-5
Two events stand out for Dimitrov: the Australian Open (semifinals) and Cincinnati Masters (title). The Bulgarian benefited from a favorable draw Down Under as part of Djokovic’s section (Djokovic lost to Denis Istomin the round two and Dimitrov beat Istomin four days later), but his Cincinnati run was especially impressive. It included wins over Juan Martin Del Potro, John Isner (during Isner’s favorite time of year), and Kyrgios. Dimitrov’s stellar display against Kyrgios in the final propelled him to the biggest title of his career.
7. David Goffin
Tokyo R2: Goffin d. Matthew Ebden 2-6, 7-5, 7-6(1)
This is by far the most obscure match on this list, but it did not lack in London importance. While many others threw away their WTF chances this fall (most notably Carreno Busta, Querrey, and Kevin Anderson), Goffin excelled during the post-U.S. Open swing to clinch his spot. He captured two titles and reached the Basel semifinals. The most important tile came in Tokyo, where the Belgian gained 500 points after almost leaving with just 45. Goffin twice failed to serve out his second-round match against Ebden, had to serve to stay alive at 5-6 in the third, and finally prevailed in a final-set tiebreaker.
8. Jack Sock
Paris Masters R2: Sock d. Kyle Edmund 4-6, 7-6(4), 7-6(5)
You would need all 10 fingers to count the players still in mathematical WTF contention going into Paris. The majority of that group had to win the title, and that group included Sock. And that is exactly what Sock did. But his miraculous run to by far the biggest title of his career almost never got off the ground. In his opening match against Edmund, the American trailed 5-1 in the third set and also took a medical timeout for a back injury. He somehow stormed back to beat Edmund and the rest, of course, is history.
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9. Pablo Carreno Busta
China Open R1: Steve Darcis d. Carreno Busta 6-0, 6-4
Carreno Busta put himself in the year-end championship discussion with a quarterfinal run at the French Open and he moved into qualifying position with a shocking semifinal appearance at the U.S. Open. But a brutal fall slump ended his hopes, and it was touched off by his opening loss to Darcis at the 500-point event in Beijing. The Spaniard won only four total games against Darcis and never got back on track. He finished the season with a 1-6 record in his last seven matches.
10. Juan Martin Del Potro
Shanghai Masters SF: Federer d. Del Potro 6-7(5), 6-4, 6-3
The three majors other than the U.S. Open are what really hurt Del Potro. He skipped the Australian summer and did not do anything at either Roland Garros or Wimbledon. Still, he would have qualified for the World Tour Finals if he had upset Federer in either Shanghai or Basel. Del Potro was especially up against it in Basel, where he was playing for the fourth time in four weeks and clearly running low on energy. It was in the Shanghai semifinals where he really had his chance. But Federer recovered from a set deficit to get the job done and he eventually cruised past Nadal in the final–a match that obviously would have been winnable for Del Potro.
11. Sam Querrey
U.S. Open QF: Kevin Anderson d. Querrey 7-6(5), 6-7(9), 6-3, 7-6(7)
If any loss has ever hurt Querrey (maybe not!), this one had to. Playing at his home slam, the American had already capitalized on a favorable draw and only Anderson and Carreno Busta (would have been his semis opponent) stood in his way of a major final. Querrey had plenty of chances in the quarterfinals but eventually lost a four-set thriller to Anderson after three hours and 27 minutes. Having previously reached the last four at Wimbledon, back-to-back slam semifinal performances would have sent Querrey well on his way to the O2 Arena.
12. Kevin Anderson
Wimbledon R4: Querrey d. Anderson 5-7, 7-6(5), 6-3, 6-7(11), 6-3
Yes, Querrey and Anderson basically eliminated each other by trading a pair of five-set battles in the last two slams of the season. Had either man gone 2-0 in those showdowns, he would have sailed to the O2 Arena with little trouble. But before Anderson got the best of Querrey in New York, the 6’8” South African succumbed after three hours and seven minutes in the Wimbledon fourth round. Had Anderson won, an injured Murray would have awaited him in the quarterfinals.
13. Jo-Wilfried Tsonga
French Open R1: Renzo Olivo d. Tsonga 7-5, 6-4, 6-7(6), 6-4
After reaching the quarters of the Aussie, Tsonga was a disaster at slams (first round of Roland Garros, third round of Wimbledon, second round of the U.S. Open). And although the Frenchman is not at his best on clay, he is a two-time French Open semifinalist (2013, 2015) and could have done plenty of damage once again with Nadal, Djokovic, and Thiem all on the other side of the draw. Instead, Tsonga lost right off the bat to Olivo of all people.
14. John Isner
U.S. Open R3: Mischa Zverev d. Isner 6-4, 6-3, 7-6(5)
Speaking of being a disaster at slams, Isner has been just that throughout his otherwise stellar career and this season was no exception. It was all set up for him to break through at the U.S. Open, where the bottom half of the draw was positively wide open. As early as the third round, Isner was arguably the favorite to reach the final. Those ideas went up in smoke with a straight-set loss to Zverev (who also beat him in round two of the Aussie and ended up making the quarterfinals) and Isner was never in serious London contention until his recent Paris semifinal run.
15. Lucas Pouille
Australian Open R1: Alexander Bublik d. Pouille 6-0, 3-6, 6-3, 6-4
Like Isner, Pouille was never in real London contention until Paris, where he had to finish no worse than runner-up to have even the slightest mathematical shot. Before his season took off on clay in April, the Frenchman put himself in a significant hole with a rough first three months–plagued by back-to-back losses against Donald Young in Indian Wells and Miami. But no result was more impactful than a four-set loss to Bublik in round one of the Australian Open.