Zverev beats De Minaur to defend Washington ATP crown

AFP  |  Washington 

says defending his ATP title shows growing in strength and maturity, but the world number three still sees a big gap to and

The 21-year-old German won his third title of the year and the ninth of his career by defeating Australian teen 6-2, 6-4 in the 50th edition of tuneup event.

"What a fantastic week for me," Zverev said. "Winning is something amazing. This has been a very special week for me.

"(Defending a title) feels great and shows mental strength as well. It shows a little maturity I think."

While Zverev stands atop a generation of rising young stars, he still puts 20-time winner Federer, 36, and 17-time champion Nadal, 32, on the highest of pedestals.

"Roger and Rafa are still the best out there and still competing for titles," he said.

"I haven't won a Grand Slam title. Saying I'm on their level wouldn't be fair to them."

Not since 20-year-old beat 19-year-old 11 years ago at Indian Wells had the combined ages of ATP finalists been so young. And not since 1995 in had all four semi-finalists been 21-or-under, Zverev being the eldest.

"It's not only me that's the future of the sport. I think everybody who made it to the semi-finals is the future," Zverev said.

"We all want to be the best. Some of us already think we're the best. We all have a lot of talent."

Zverev joined a list of back-to-back Washington champions that includes Andre Agassi, and

- Aussie takes 'proud' step -

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Zverev struggled when asked where his game needs work, saying with a smile, "I think I'm close to perfection."

De Minaur, who took only 11 points off Zverev's serve, could somewhat agree after falling in 74 minutes.

"He played some great He came out blazing and was too good for me," De Minaur said.

"It gives you that fire to replicate the success he has had at such a young age. I think he's going to be around for a very long time."

It was the second career ATP final for the 19-year-old from Sydney, who lost a final there to in January. De Minaur saved four match points in beating in a grueling semi-final to get there.

"I did everything I could to recover," De Minaur said.

"I'll have to get better at it and my body will adjust to the circumstances."

The 72nd-ranked Aussie will jump to a career-best 45th in Monday's rankings.

"I'm really proud of myself. I played some high-level matches," De Minaur said.

Zverev, who needed a fifth-set tie-breaker to beat De Minaur in their only prior meeting, broke twice to win the first set in 30 minutes. He smacked a forehand winner to break for a 2-1 edge and held serve to the finish.

- Murray 'shock to system' -

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De Minaur reached the semi-finals when three-time Grand Slam champion withdrew Friday after three grueling three-set matches in only his third event since missing 11 months with a

"To go from nothing to back-to-backs like that was quite a shock to the system. He was a bit beaten up," said Andy's brother Jamie Murray, who won the doubles title with Brazilian

Murray also withdrew from next week's event in but plans to play in the following week.

"Andy is on his way back," Zverev said.

"He looked unbelievable here. It's going to be great to see what he can do."

In the companion WTA event final, two-time Grand Slam champion saved four match points and rallied to defeat Croatia's 4-6, 7-6 (9/7), 6-2 for her 18th career title.

It was the 33-year-old Russian's first crown since 2016 in and second in Washington after 2014.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Mon, August 06 2018. 10:40 IST