Impressive Djokovic beats Dimitrov as Nadal withdraws

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PARIS: Novak Djokovic reached the Paris Masters final for the sixth time when he downed Bulgarian Grigor Dimitrov 7-6 (7-5), 6-4 on Saturday but Rafael Nadal pulled out injured.

Serbia’s world number one, who will be supplanted by Nadal at the top of the ATP rankings on Monday, won a high-octane first-set tiebreak before wearing down Dimitrov in the second set.

Djokovic will face Canada’s Denis Shapovalov in the final at Bercy after 19-time Grand Slam champion Nadal, who would have secured the year-end number one spot with the title here, withdrew minutes before his semi-final match with an abdominal injury.

The Spaniard did not want to take any risks ahead of the Nov. 10-17 ATP Finals, where his participation now hangs in the balance.

“In one of the last serves of the warm-up, I felt something in the abdominal. And immediately I came back to the doctor here to do the echography and to check with the doctor, and the doctor told me that we need to wait a little bit more,” Nadal told a news conference.

“So I waited for one hour and a half more to do a second test. And we did it, we saw something on the image, probably a small strain.”

He explained he was hoping to be ready for the season-ending event at the O2 Arena in London and would “do all I can do and all that’s mathematically possible to recover for it”.

“But as you can expect, today I can’t answer this question,” he said when asked if he would recover in time.

It will be Shapovalov’s maiden Masters final after three previous semi-final defeats.

The 20-year-old thrashed Gael Monfils in the quarters on Friday, having also knocked out sixth seed Alexander Zverev in the last 16.

“It’s a great opportunity for me to be in the finals of a (Masters) 1000,” said Shapovalov, who won his maiden ATP title in Stockholm last month and will break into the world’s top 15 on Monday. “It’s awesome to be in my first finals and it’s just kind of a bonus for me.”

Top seed Djokovic, who has lifted the trophy here four times and will feature in his 50th Masters final, played better than Dimitrov in the key moments and served well throughout. There were no break points in the first set.

In the tiebreak, Dimitrov moved 5-3 up after an untimely Djokovic double fault, only for the Serbian to regain his composure, levelling for 5-5 with an exquisite defensive lob and winning the set at the end of a lung-busting, 35-shot rally.

Dimitrov let his guard down in the fifth game of the second set, allowing Djokovic to snatch the only break of the match.

The 16-time Grand Slam winner held serve throughout to strengthen his hopes of ending the season as world number one.

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