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- Stanislas Wawrinka beat Novak Djokovic and Rafael Nadal for his first Grand Slam title.
MELBOURNE, Australia -- Stanislas Wawrinka of Switzerland held on to
stun a hobbled Rafael Nadal 6-3, 6-2, 3-6, 6-3 and win his first Grand
Slam championship in his major debut at the Australian Open on Sunday.
No.
8 Wawrinka, long the second fiddle to compatriot Roger Federer, erased
an 0-12 record against No. 1 Nadal -- not even having won a set off the
Spaniard -- and knocked off three top-10 players during his Cinderella
run, including three-time defending champion Novak Djokovic.
"Last
year I had a crazy match (to Djokovic). I lost it. I was crying a lot
after the match," Wawrinka said at the trophy ceremony. "Right now I
don't know if I'm dreaming or not, but we'll see tomorrow morning."
Wawrinka
is projected to move to a career-high No. 3 on Monday, the first time
he has ranked ahead of 17-time major winner Federer.
Wawrinka is
only the second man since the 2005 Australian Open – a span of 36 majors
– to win a Grand Slam outside of Nadal, Federer, Djokovic and Andy
Murray. Juan Martin del Potro captured the 2009 U.S. Open, also in his
Grand Slam final debut.
Wawrinka, 28, who reached his first Grand
Slam semifinal at the U.S. Open in September, set the pace with a
blistering first set. He pushed around the 13-time Grand Slam champion
from Spain with a potent mix of forehands, backhands and smart forays to
the net.
Broken at love to start the second set, Nadal appeared
to tweak his back at the end of the third game trailing 2-1. He called
the trainer and then left the court for a medical timeout.
Wawrinka
argued with umpire Carlos Ramos about the nature of Nadal's injury and
when Nadal returned to Rod Laver Arena, the crowd booed.
Clearly
hampered, later admitting he felt something from the beginning, Nadal
struggled with his movement and his serve speed dipped from about 110mph
to 75mph, but he soldiered on.
In the awkward third set, Nadal,
still not moving at full capacity but perhaps assisted by painkillers,
shortened the points as Wawrinka lost focus.
But Nadal also said the moment belonged to Wawrinka: "Stan, he really ... deserved to win that title. I'm happy for him. He's a great guy, a good friend of mine."
Wawrinka, the 2008 Olympic gold medalist in doubles with Federer, recovered in time to bring Switzerland its second male Grand Slam champion.
Nadal, the 2009 Melbourne winner and 2012 runner-up, fell to 13-6 in major finals. The 27-year-old Mallorca native was bidding to tie Pete Sampras in second place with 14 major crowns and become just the third man in history after Rod Laver and Roy Emerson to win all four majors at least twice.
Wawrinka, the new Swiss No. 1, is the first man to defeat the top two seeds at a Grand Slam since Sergi Bruguera at the 1993 French Open beat No. 1 Sampras and No. 2 Jim Courier.