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Stubborn Fritz shrugs off injury to see off Nadal at Indian Wells

Hours earlier it looked like the 24-year-old American ranked 20th in the world wouldn't be able to take the court for what would turn out to be the greatest win of his career.

AFP
Indian Wells, United States
Mon, March 21, 2022

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Stubborn Fritz shrugs off injury to see off Nadal at Indian Wells Switzerland's Roger Federer speaks with Taylor Fritz of the US during their men's singles match on day five of the Australian Open tennis tournament in Melbourne on January 18, 2019. (AFP/David Gray)

T

aylor Fritz's stubborn streak stood him in good stead on Sunday as the American worked through a painful ankle injury in time to see off Spanish great Rafael Nadal in the ATP Indian Wells Masters final.

Hours earlier it looked like the 24-year-old American ranked 20th in the world wouldn't be able to take the court for what would turn out to be the greatest win of his career.ATP

But after treatment to numb the pain and against the advice of several in his camp, Fritz found himself celebrating a 6-3, 7-6 (7/5) triumph over the 21-time Grand Slam champion.

"In the end, I am glad I made this decision," Fritz said. "We'll see how it is tomorrow. I have an MRI tomorrow."

He acknowledged that his participation in next week's Miami Masters is now "questionable."

But he's not sorry he's so "incredibly stubborn."

The 24-year-old Californian said that's part of what helped him recover in time for Wimbledon last year after he departed Roland Garros in a wheelchair then underwent surgery to repair damage in his right knee.

"I think I'm an extremely stubborn person," he said of his ability to shake off injury. "I also think I have a very high pain tolerance and not a lot of regard for potentially damaging myself worse if I think there's a chance I can get on the court and play.

"It's probably a lot of not-so-good things that get me on the court," added Fritz, who also kept playing in Toronto last year when he was "seeing fuzzy and almost blacking out."

He had plenty of incentive to tough it out on Sunday, with a chance to play one of the game's greats at a tournament he attended with his father as a child growing up in Southern California.

The reward was a first Masters 1000 title that made him the first American to win at the elite level since John Isner won in Miami in 2018.

"My dad brought me here as a kid," Fritz said. "He told me that I was going to win this tournament one day when I was a little kid.

"He was just really, really proud of me," Fritz said of his emotional post-match talk with his parents. "And it's really tough to get a compliment out of him."

While Fritz's ankle injury may keep him out of Miami, he believes his Indian Wells win is a step toward his current goal of reaching the top 10.

"This obviously helps a lot," he said. "Obviously I'd love to go way higher than that and achieve way more than that."

bb/rcw

© Agence France-Presse

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