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© Michael O'Kane
© Melchior A. DiGiacomo

(September 16, 2010) Rafael Nadal completed the career Grand Slam by winning the US Open on Monday night. Now he's locked up the top spot for the year. For the second time in three years Nadal will finish as the No. 1 player in the year-end ATP Rankings.

The 24-year-old Spaniard is the ninth player in the history of the South African Airways ATP Rankings (since 1973) to finish as ATP World Tour Champion at least twice. He and rival Roger Federer are the only players since 2000 to clinch the year-end No. 1 ranking in the week after the US Open. Federer did it in 2004 and '06.

"It has been an incredible season - one of my best ever, if not the best," Nadal said. "Winning the US Open together with Roland Garros and Wimbledon, as well as the three back-to-back (ATP World Tour) Masters 1000s in Europe, was not easy.  I worked very hard to get back to the top and it feels really good to know I will end the year as No.1."

Nadal will be officially crowned as the 2010 ATP World Tour Champion during a special ceremony at the season-ending Barclays ATP World Tour Finals in London, November 21-28. Nadal and Federer are the first two players to qualify for the eight-man field. He is the third left-hander to finish No. 1 at least twice, joining Jimmy Connors (five times, 1974-78) and John McEnroe (four times, 1981-84).

On Monday, Nadal became the seventh man in history to achieve a career Grand Slam as he earned his first US Open title. He is also the first player to win three straight Grand Slam titles in the same year since Rod Laver won all four in 1969. Nadal is the youngest player in the Open Era to achieve a career Grand Slam. It was the Mallorcan native's ninth career Grand Slam crown and he is the second-youngest player behind Bjorn Borg to win nine Slam titles.

Nadal also joins Ivan Lendl and Federer as the only players to have held, lost and regained the year-end No. 1 ranking in the 37-year history of the South African Airways ATP Rankings (since 1973). Lendl held the year-end No. 1 ranking from 1985-87 and finished No. 2 in 1988 before reclaiming No. 1 in 1989. Federer was No. 1 from 2004-07, went to No. 2 in '08 and then returned to the top spot last year.

Nadal leads the ATP World Tour with six titles and a 59-7 match record in 2010. Since April he has won 43 of 46 matches, winning six of nine tournaments, including three consecutive ATP World Tour Masters 1000 clay court events (Monte-Carlo, Rome, Madrid) and his fifth Roland Garros title in six years. In July, he captured his second Wimbledon title in three years.

ATP WORLD TOUR CHAMPIONS (since 1973)           MULTIPLE ATP WORLD TOUR CHAMPIONS
                         
Year     Player           Player     Number of titles.
2010     Rafael Nadal (Spain)         Pete Sampras     6
2009     Roger Federer (Switzerland)         Jimmy Connors     5
2008     Rafael Nadal (Spain)         Roger Federer     5
2007     Roger Federer (Switzerland)         Ivan Lendl     4
2006     Roger Federer (Switzerland)         John McEnroe     4
2005     Roger Federer (Switzerland)         Bjorn Borg     2
2004     Roger Federer (Switzerland)         Stefan Edberg     2
2003     Andy Roddick (U.S.)         Lleyton Hewitt     2
2002     Llyeton Hewitt (Australia)         Rafael Nadal     2
2001     Lleyton Hewitt (Australia)                  
2000     Gustavo Kuerten (Brazil)          
1999     Andre Agassi (U.S.)      
1998     Pete Sampras (U.S.)      
1997     Pete Sampras (U.S.)      
1996     Pete Sampras (U.S.)      
1995     Pete Sampras (U.S.)      
1994     Pete Sampras (U.S.)      
1993     Pete Sampras (U.S.)      
1992     Jim Courier (U.S.)      
1991     Stefan Edberg (Sweden)      
1990     Stefan Edberg (Sweden)      
1989     Ivan Lendl (Czech Republic)      
1988     Mats Wilander (Sweden)      
1987     Ivan Lendl (Czech Republic)      
1986     Ivan Lendl (Czech Republic)      
1985     Ivan Lendl (Czech Republic)      
1984     John McEnroe (U.S.)      
1983     John McEnroe (U.S.)      
1982     John McEnroe (U.S.)      
1981     John McEnroe (U.S.)      
1980     Bjorn Borg (Sweden)      
1979     Bjorn Borg (Sweden)      
1978     Jimmy Connors (U.S.)      
1977     Jimmy Connors (U.S.)      
1976     Jimmy Connors (U.S.)      
1975     Jimmy Connors (U.S.)      
1974     Jimmy Connors (U.S.)      
1973     Ilie Nastase (Romania)

 

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