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Kerr: Green 'a wrecking ball' in comeback win

Published in Basketball
Sunday, 19 May 2019 00:04

PORTLAND, Ore. -- Golden State Warriors power forward Draymond Green racked up his seventh career postseason triple-double during a 110-99 Game 3 win over the Portland Trail Blazers in the Western Conference finals on Saturday night. Green scored 20 points, grabbed 13 rebounds, dished out 12 assists, made four steals and blocked a shot in one of the most complete all-around games of his career.

"I don't even know what to say about Draymond," Warriors head coach Steve Kerr said. "He was like a wrecking ball out there. He was just destroying everything in his path. The pace that he was generating was incredible, and it just seemed like he never got tired. ... It's one of the best games I've ever seen Draymond play."

Green set the tone for a Warriors team that fell into an 18-point hole in the first half and was down 14 with 8:08 left in the third quarter. His ability to push the tempo and get the rest of his teammates to feed off his energy propelled the Warriors to a victory that leaves them just one win shy of earning their fifth straight NBA Finals appearance, something that hasn't been done since the 1960s Boston Celtics.

"I mean, his stat line's ridiculous," Warriors swingman Klay Thompson said. "Four steals, doing it on both ends, plus-16. But it's nothing new. I've seen him do it for seven years. ... He makes us go, especially when we push that pace. I'm proud of Dray, and he's not satisfied."

Green, who has long been considered the emotional engine of the Warriors during their dynastic run over the past five years, made an interesting acknowledgement on Saturday night regarding just how important it has been for him to keep that emotional fire in check over the past few weeks.

"My teammates always tell me, 'We follow your body language,'" Green said.

After picking up four technical fouls early in the postseason, Green said he was able to refocus on staying away from having bad confrontations with officials. Seven technical fouls in the postseason earn an automatic one-game suspension, something Green knows he can't afford, especially as the Warriors try to continue winning without injured stars Kevin Durant (calf) and DeMarcus Cousins (quad).

"I think it definitely helps the energy of the guys," Green said of keeping his negative interactions with the officials in check. "I still like to pick and choose my spots. Sometimes I may take a tech, but that's more mindful than just getting a tech. Sometimes I know like, 'All right, I need an energy burst, maybe I'll take one.'

"But sometimes I'm not mindful and I'll get a tech, and that will just kill the energy of our team. I've been really focused and locked in on that, and I realized I got to a point where I was doing more crying than playing. I'm sure it was disgusting to watch because I felt disgusting playing that way, and I just wanted to lock back in on the game."

Green credited his mom, Mary Babers-Green, and his fiancée, Hazel Renee, with being able to help him direct his energy elsewhere on the floor instead of getting in combative arguments with the officials.

"I understand that officials aren't perfect, and I still have conversations with them now when they miss a call, but it's completely different conversations. You know, my mom has been really big [in helping me]. My fiancée has been really big [with] just talking to me about that and just telling me to stay locked in on the game. I also have some little ones at the house that's enjoying watching me play. I don't necessarily want them to see that. So just try to be more mindful of it."

It's a change Kerr has been happy to see.

"He's playing with force," Kerr said. "He's playing with discipline, he's playing under control. He's not letting anything bother him -- officiating, bad shots, turnovers -- he's just moving on to the next play. So from that standpoint, it's as good as he's ever been."

Green's impact on every aspect of the game has been felt by every player on the floor. Saturday's first half marked the fourth time this postseason that Green had at least 10 points, 5 rebounds and 5 assists in a single half, the most by any player, according to ESPN Stats & Information research.

"Watching him on defense, I mean, it's incredible," Blazers big man Meyers Leonard said. "His reads, his communication, his weakside defense, blocking shots, steals -- it's pretty impressive. Not only that, but he's a playmaker on the other end, as well. He knows who to get the ball and when to get them the ball ... He's a winner. I mean, point blank, he gets it done. He brings it every single night."

Now Green and the Warriors hope they can keep their momentum going and close out the Blazers on Monday night. To do so, Warriors star Stephen Curry and the rest of his teammates are banking on Green continuing his high level of play.

"It's like he's got eight eyeballs," Curry said. "He sees everything and kind of knows what to say at the right time ... He's just observant of everything and has just a high basketball IQ. That's just, obviously, his experience, but the fact that he's so versatile that he can do a lot of different stuff and knows how to help a team win."

ESPN's Tim MacMahon contributed to this report.

PORTLAND, Ore. -- On the road in the playoffs, the Golden State Warriors are (expletive) giants.

Of everything this team has accomplished over the past five seasons, a number that personifies its dominance is the streak the Warriors extended Saturday night when they defeated the Portland Trail Blazers 110-99 to take a 3-0 series lead in the Western Conference finals.

The Warriors now have 22 consecutive series with at least one road victory. That's already an NBA record, and it might stand for a long time. The Warriors already are flirting with the Chicago Bulls' six championships in eight years and even the Boston Celtics' eight straight titles in the 1960s for greatest-team-of-all-time status.

"It's so hard to win a championship in this league," Golden State coach Steve Kerr said. "The competition is so fierce, and it's a two-month journey once the playoffs start. You know, they have been to the Finals four times, so that tells you all you need to know about their toughness and their competitive desire."

The Warriors ended LeBron James' personal streak of 33 consecutive road series with a win in the NBA Finals last season. That stat will never be remembered like his eight consecutive Finals appearances, but it is the underlying reason they happened, the guts of how he dominated.

Golden State must win on the road to three-peat, as they won't have home-court advantage in the next round. If the Warriors run their streak to 23, the guts of their four championships in five seasons will be victories such as:

  • Game 4 in Memphis in 2015, during the Warriors' first title run, when they were down 2-1 and Kerr made a then-wild decision to have Andrew Bogut guard Tony Allen, a move that changed the series.

  • Game 4 in the Finals that year in Cleveland, as Kerr stunned all by putting Andre Iguodala in the starting lineup and changing that series.

  • Game 6 in Oklahoma City in 2016, when Klay Thompson made 11 3-pointers to keep the Warriors alive.

  • Game 7 last season in Houston, as Stephen Curry and Kevin Durant rained in 3-pointers in the third quarter to destroy an 11-point deficit.

  • Even Game 6 last week in Houston, as Curry scored 33 points in the second half after zero in the first half to crush the Rockets' hopes after Durant's calf injury.

This number is a cornerstone of the Warriors' case for what it represents: soul-crushing execution under pressure, relentless depth and disciplined defense that travels.

That combo is what broke the Blazers in Game 3. The spirit of '77 might still be alive in the Rose City, but the spirit of this memorable Blazers team was snuffed out with Golden State warrioring on the road in one of the toughest places to play in the league.

"I don't think we've been that great in Game 3s over the years," Kerr said, knowing that all but one of their Game 3s have been on the road over the past five years. "That's all we talked about the last two days was we have an amazing opportunity to seize control here. That's what I think this was about -- respecting our opponent, knowing the magical run they have been on, how tough they are to beat in this building, and understanding that this is the game."

Kerr is right: The Warriors were just 10-8 in Game 3s over the past five years heading into Saturday. If you're going to beat them, getting them on your home floor for Game 3 is the time to do it. The Blazers knew this innately, came out with energy and built a huge lead.

But the Warriors applied their honed weapons that have worked on the road over and over and over, vaporizing what was an 18-point first-half lead.

They were smothering defensively, holding the Blazers to just 33 second-half points, the lowest for any half in a playoff game during the streak. If you want to see a clinic, watch the game back and keep an eye on Thompson's defense; he never takes a possession off. If you beat him, it's going to be because you're better than him in that moment, not because he let down. He has beaten down the Portland star guards, Damian Lillard and CJ McCollum, who combined to shoot 12-of-38 on Saturday.

Golden State had great teamwork on offense. Even though they didn't shoot the 3-pointer well -- they made just 8-of-26 of them -- the Warriors had 27 assists on their 41 baskets and just 13 turnovers. Go back over the annals of their road wins and you will repeatedly see these sorts of ratios. Draymond Green, who is handling the ball more with Durant out and everyone bumped up in line, had 12 assists in yet another brilliant all-around game.

Then there are the role players. Over the years, it has been Bogut, David Lee, Shaun Livingston, Nick Young, JaVale McGee, Matt Barnes and the like who have delivered when badly needed on the road, where role players often struggle.

On Saturday, it was Jordan Bell -- a player the Warriors were so frustrated with a couple of months ago that they suspended him for breaking team rules to try a last-ditch effort to get through to him -- who was a role player hero.

When it's all over and the Warriors have been broken up, retired or just have a down year, all of these games will be a blur. This particular Western Conference finals will probably not even be distinguishable among all these other big series.

But the streak will endure. Or, at least, it should. Even if it ends in the next few weeks and the Warriors don't win the title, it's just that damn impressive. No one team has ever ruined the nights of so many home fans every spring across the country, an outcome this team just loves.

"You don't win without that competitiveness," Curry said. "And that killer instinct."

D-backs' Greinke cleared to make next start

Published in Baseball
Saturday, 18 May 2019 18:28

PHOENIX -- Arizona Diamondbacks pitcher Zack Greinke is on track to make his next scheduled start Tuesday at San Diego after throwing a bullpen session before Saturday's game, Diamondbacks manager Torey Lovullo said.

Greinke felt pain in his side and was diagnosed with abdominal tightness during the eighth inning of his start Wednesday against the Pittsburgh Pirates. He motioned for a trainer and left the game.

An MRI on Friday revealed no damage.

Greinke, who would start on five days' rest if he takes the mound next week as expected, is 6-1 with a 2.78 ERA in 10 starts this season. Opponents are batting .210 against him.

Also for Arizona, outfielder David Peralta, the team's leading hitter among everyday players, was scratched from the original lineup Saturday. He aggravated tightness in his upper back and shoulder on a dive for a ball during Friday night's game.

Peralta, the Diamondbacks' leader in hits and co-leader in runs scored and RBI, was first injured Wednesday but started Friday's game.

"We feel like he'll be day-to-day and he'll be available for [Sunday]," Lovullo said, adding that Peralta might be OK to come off the bench if needed Saturday night. "I'm willing to sacrifice today rather than seven possible days if something were wrong and he were to do more damage in there."

Blake Swihart was in the lineup as the Diamondbacks' left fielder in place of Peralta against the San Francisco Giants on Saturday.

Giants' Cueto hoping to return in September

Published in Baseball
Saturday, 18 May 2019 19:18

PHOENIX -- San Francisco Giants right-hander Johnny Cueto threw a bullpen session Saturday, and the team was encouraged enough for manager Bruce Bochy to say the club hopes Cueto can return toward the end of this season.

Cueto, who had major elbow surgery last August, was 18-5 in 2016 and selected to the All-Star Game, but he has since gone 11-10 in the past two years combined.

"I think he surprised a lot of us with where he's at," Bochy said before Saturday's game against the Arizona Diamondbacks. "It's all fastballs, but he's gotten himself in great shape, too. I think it's the best shape I've seen Johnny in, to be honest.

"From what you saw today, you've got to believe he's going to be pitching before the season's over. I'm not going to be surprised if he pitches in September."

Cueto threw off flat ground Saturday, and the hope is that next week he will throw breaking balls and changeups.

If Cueto comes back in September, it will be as a starting pitcher, Bochy said. Cueto, 33, has been a starter since breaking into the majors in 2008 with the Cincinnati Reds.

"I'm happy to be here and it's good to be around the guys and spend some time with the team," Cueto said in Spanish. "God willing, yes, I want to pitch in September. Right now, I feel really good."

Cueto said he has lost 20 pounds, down from 245 to 225 pounds, and would like to pitch at 230.

"I feel like a kid of 20, 25 years old," Cueto said with a laugh.

Mets' Callaway: Can't worry about job security

Published in Baseball
Saturday, 18 May 2019 21:00

Following a second straight loss to the last-place Marlins in Miami, New York Mets manager Mickey Callaway addressed increasing speculation that his job is in jeopardy.

The Mets fell a season-worst four games under .500 after being held to one hit in Saturday's 2-0 loss.

The Marlins, with the worst record in the majors, beat the Mets for the second straight day after entering the series with a seven-game losing streak.

"I'm coming in tomorrow to manage the New York Mets and I'm going to be enthusiastic about it and I'm going to continue to lead this team to something special," Callaway said.

"As a leader, you can't ever worry about yourself. I'm here. One of the things I told them when I got hired was selfless service is very important to me, and my goal every day is to improve that room, be consistent, and make sure our players continue to improve."

Callaway is in his second year with the Mets, who made lots of changes in the offseason, including a blockbuster trade for All-Star second baseman Robinson Cano and closer Edwin Diaz.

Last week, Callaway had a long meeting with Mets chief operating officer Jeff Wilpon and general manager Brodie Van Wagenen. They spoke about how to avoid the free fall the Mets endured last year right around this time, before finishing the season fourth in the National League East at 77-85.

"I do believe we have talent in there," Callaway said Saturday. "We haven't played like that. There's no doubt that hasn't been the case, but I believe those things for a reason, and I believe everyone comes to the park every day for something greater than what's been happening. We have to start making it happen, somehow, some way."

Mets veteran third baseman Todd Frazier defended his manager.

"It's not a question for me -- I think he's doing a great job," Frazier said. "He can't go up there and hit. He makes the lineup, he puts the guys in at the right time, and we're not producing."

A crowd of 13,474 saw the Marlins record their first one-hit shutout since four pitchers combined to throw one on May 7, 2017, against the Mets in New York.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Twins make history with fifth five-plus HR game

Published in Baseball
Sunday, 19 May 2019 01:30

SEATTLE -- The Minnesota Twins' offense has been rolling all season. They had their best game yet Saturday night against the Seattle Mariners.

C.J. Cron and Jonathan Schoop each hit two home runs and Byron Buxton had a grand slam as the Twins cruised to an 18-4 victory. Miguel Sano also homered for the Twins, who extended their season-high home run streak to 13 games and moved into a tie with Seattle for the major league home run lead with 87.

"It's fun to put on that kind of offensive performance," Cron said. "One through nine, we all swung it really well so it was fun to watch."

Minnesota's 18 runs were a season high. The Twins have won the first three games of the four-game series, outscoring the Mariners 36-11. Minnesota became the first team in major league history to have five games with at least five home runs before the start of June.

"There's no weak spots in our lineup," Cron said. "As a pitcher, that can't be a comfortable thing. They have to be on their game for every batter."

Wade LeBlanc (2-1), making his first start in more than a month after returning from the injured list, gave up seven runs and seven hits -- including a career-worst four home runs.

"Those guys over there, there's not much you can say," LeBlanc said. "I want to say that's the best hitting team I've ever faced in my life. That's how they looked tonight."

LeBlanc left his last outing on April 12 with a strained right oblique. Before Saturday's game, Mariners manager Scott Servais said he hoped LeBlanc would have a "competitive outing" against the Twins, with a pitch limit around 75 pitches. LeBlanc didn't meet either goal, getting knocked out in the third inning after throwing just 49 pitches.

Minnesota's offense started the rout in the second inning when Cron hit his first homer, the 100th of his career. Later in the inning, Buxton's grand slam -- the Twins' first of the year -- opened the floodgates.

Buxton and Schoop both tied career highs with five RBI. Buxton added a run-scoring single to his grand slam, and Schoop had two-run and three-run homers.

Starter Jose Berrios was looking to rebound after his roughest outing of the season in which he gave up five runs and 12 hits, both season highs, in a loss to the Angels on Monday. Berrios cruised through the first four innings in this one, but wasn't able to pick up the win. He was pulled in the fifth after giving up four runs and six hits in the inning, and throwing 105 pitches overall.

"Some very long breaks for him, multiple very long breaks in only four innings," Twins manager Rocco Baldelli said. "That can definitely be challenging. If it wasn't for purely pitch count reasons, we'd probably let him go out there and finish the inning."

Tyler Duffey (1-0) came on and went 1 1/3 innings to earn the victory.

IN RELIEF

Mariners backup catcher Tom Murphy pitched the ninth inning, retiring all three batters he faced with two strikeouts. He was the sixth Seattle pitcher, and the only one not to give up a run or a hit or walk a batter.

TRAINER'S ROOM

Mariners: INF Dylan Moore started a rehab assignment with Triple-A Tacoma on Saturday. Moore has been on the injured list since May 10 with a wrist contusion. ... RHP Sam Tuivailala, recovering from a right Achilles rupture, is also with Tacoma for rehab after being transferred from Single-A Modesto. ... Servais said RHP Gerson Bautista, who strained his right pectoral muscle in spring training, will also start a rehab assignment at Tacoma soon.

ROSTER MOVE

Seattle optioned RHP Matt Festa to Triple-A Tacoma to make room on the roster for LeBlanc.

FIRST TIME

Luis Arraez made his major league debut for the Twins, entering in the fifth inning as a defensive replacement at shortstop. He doubled in the eighth inning.

UP NEXT

Twins: Kyle Gibson (3-1, 4.19 ERA) makes his ninth start in the final game of the four-game series with Seattle.

Mariners: Yusei Kikuchi (2-1, 3.64) has gone at least six innings and given up three runs or fewer in all three of his starts in May.

Maddon protests loss to Nats over double toe-tap

Published in Baseball
Saturday, 18 May 2019 21:57

WASHINGTON -- The Chicago Cubs protested Saturday night's 5-2 loss to the Nationals, with manager Joe Maddon arguing that Washington reliever Sean Doolittle used an illegal delivery in the ninth inning.

The double toe-tap Doolittle appeared to use as he delivered the ball to home plate has been deemed illegal in the past, but umpires on Saturday did not force the left-hander to alter his delivery, much to the dismay of Maddon.

"I said, 'If you guys don't clean it up, I'm going to protest the game,'" Maddon said after the game. "It's their rule, not mine. I didn't ask for it in the first place."

Maddon came out to argue after Doolittle's first pitch of the ninth inning -- a strike to pinch hitter Albert Almora Jr. Though the umpires huddled with each other, and then with Doolittle, they sided with the lefty while deeming his delivery OK.

"[Maddon] thought he was tapping his foot, which in itself is not illegal, and this all kind of stems from his pitcher being called on something that was a little bit different than what Doolittle was doing," crew chief Sam Holbrook said. "So in our judgment, Doolittle did nothing illegal at all."

Holbrook was referring to Cubs reliever Carl Edwards Jr., who was told in the second game of the season that he couldn't do his version of the double toe-tap. Recently, Mariners pitcher Cory Gearrin was also forced to change his delivery after warming up mid-inning.

"It's real simple," a somewhat exasperated Maddon said. "That's exactly what Carl was told he can't do. I was told that's an illegal pitch and he can't do it."

Edwards added: "I figured once it happened to myself, it would get around."

Maddon officially protested with one out in the ninth inning. If the Cubs win the protest, the teams would pick up the game from that point, as Doolittle retired the next two batters to earn the save.

Afterward, Doolittle was having none of what Maddon was trying to sell.

"In that moment, he's not doing anything other than rattle me," Doolittle told reporters, according to an mlb.com report. "It was kinda tired. Sometimes he has to remind people how smart he is."

Clubs battle for masters medals

Published in Athletics
Saturday, 18 May 2019 14:51

Leading veteran athletes were in action at the British Masters Road Relay Champs at Sutton Park on Saturday

Honours were shared at the British Masters Road Relays at Sutton Park near Birmingham on May 18 with a good mixture of close races and runaway victories.

Long regarded as one of the premier events on the British veteran calendar, it was held in ideal conditions on the tough Park circuit which is slightly over 5km.

The first club to take gold medals were the ever-consistent Bristol & West W45 team. Annabel Granger, hot off a 2:47 PB at the Virgin Money London Marathon, led off with a 19:07 to run the fastest leg and Claire Jolliffe (19:37) and Sarah Everitt (19:33) extended the margin to over four minutes.

Westbury were second all the way while multiple world masters medallist Sue McDonald moved from sixth to third on the final leg.

Clare Elms and her Dulwich club dominated the W55 race. She took off in third place and her 18:45 gave her club a three-minute-plus victory as she was quicker than all the W45s.

Last year’s fastest Jane Clarke, a former Masters International winner herself, was next quickest with a 20:57, which gave Norwich a huge lead on leg one.

Dulwich’s Ros Tabor had led off the eventual winners on leg one, 11 years after being in their winning team in this age group, while another masters international Ange Norris was the fastest on leg two moving Dulwich into contention. Behind, Norwich and Steel City took the other medals.

The third gold to get resolved was in the W65 event as Worcester won by a minute from Steel City – and the latter’s Dorothy Kesterton was fastest with 23:20.

Not long after the leading two W65s finished their three legs, the top W35s were finishing their four-leg race. As in 2018, Sarah Lowery gave Rotherham a good start with an 18:19 split ahead of a less than fully fit Claire Martin, who ran 18:48 for a depleted Telford.

Westbury went ahead on leg two but an 18:35 from Fiona Davies put Rotherham back in command with a three-minute lead after leg three.

The final outcome was close, though, as Rotherham’s anchor runner Di Elliott (main image above) held on despite Lisa Palmer blitzing an 18:18 split to move Derby from fifth to second as she snatched the fastest lap by a second.

Former international Eleanor Baker moved Tonbridge up to third in her masters debut with a 18:45 clocking.

The women’s race also contained an M75 race which saw Bingley win unchallenged.

The first all-male race was the M55 event and it saw a win for Leicester. Irishman Tommy Hughes, who ran a 2:30 marathon not long before his 60th birthday, blasted a 17:40 opening leg. Warrington chased them down on leg two with multiple British masters champion and M55 London Marathon winner Steve Watmough passing Leicester with an 18:02 clocking.

On the final leg, though, Phil Makepeace regained the lead for Leicester with easily the fastest leg of 17:19 as he overtook 2:12 marathoner Andy Green. In the battle for bronze, Phil Parry, with 17:26, brought Bristol up to third.

As expected, Oxford again dominated the M65 race after a good start from Stewart Thorp with the lead extended by Roy Treadwell and John Exley.

The fastest leg was shared by Bristol’s Dave Bedwell and Stan Owen of Salford, who ran 20:00.

The four-stage M45 race, which started five minutes after the M35s were set off, was the next event to be decided and saw another win for Leicester. After good starts from Gordon Lee (17:09) and Gavin McDermott (17:05) put them second, Chris Southam put them ahead with a 17:46 although it was Mark Johnson with the day’s fastest of 16:37 which ensured the gold.

Defending champions Thames Hare & Hounds were second, 48 seconds back, while Aldershot, anchored by Mark Symes, took the bronze medals.

The longest race and the final event – the M35s – saw the closest finish. Andrew Peat of Birchfield led stage one with a 15:48 clocking but fellow Brummies Birmingham RAT on leg two and then Tipton went ahead on leg three.

Salford’s Karl Darcy brought his club back into contention with the fastest leg of 15:29 and there was nothing in it after leg four.

A 15:59 for former international Phil Nicholls seemed to give Tipton a clear lead on leg five but a 15:51 anchor from Chris Livesey closed the gap significantly and meant Tipton anchor Jonathan Carter was checking behind his shoulder up the tough finishing hill. Birmingham RAT took bronze.

Test yourself against our roofs, rain & racquets quiz

Published in Tennis
Saturday, 18 May 2019 01:31

Wimbledon is preparing to unveil its new roof over Court One on Sunday.

How will you fill the few minutes it takes for it to close? By taking our roof-themed tennis quiz, of course!

World number one Novak Djokovic set up an intriguing final with Rafael Nadal after a 6-3 6-7 (2-7) 6-3 victory over Diego Schwartzman at the Italian Open.

Djokovic, who saved two match points in his quarter-final win over Juan Martin del Potro, beat a spirited Schwartzman in Rome in two hours 31 minutes.

Defending champion Nadal reached his 50th Masters 1000 final with a 6-3 6-4 win over Stefanos Tsitsipas of Greece.

His majestic forehand dominated as he won in one hour 42 minutes.

Djokovic's win in three hours one minute over Del Potro had finished at 1.05am local time on Saturday morning and his evening semi-final provided another stern test against another Argentine, Schwartzman, who played a series of impressive drop shots.

The Serb had won their two previous meetings, the last of which was at Roland Garros in 2017, and he claimed the first break in the seventh game when Schwartzman netted a forehand.

But having lost the opening set in 36 minutes, Schwartzman, in his first Masters 1000 semi-final, kept in contention and a superb backhand down the line gave him a break in the fifth game of the second set.

It was the first of four successive breaks in a fluctuating set that went to a tie-break, which Schwartzman, winner of two ATP titles, quickly took control of.

Djokovic, 31, seized the key break in the sixth game of the decider to reach his ninth Italian final as he bids to repeat last week's victory at the Madrid Open.

He leads 28-25 in his duel with Nadal that began in 2006, winning their most recent encounter in the first Grand Slam of this year, the Australian Open in January, but the Spaniard has dominated their clay court matches 16-7.

Nadal, 32, had lost in the semi-finals of his last four tournaments, including a defeat against Tsitsipas last weekend in Madrid.

It is his first clay court final of the year and he will look to continue a fine record in the Masters 1,000 Series.

Since 2005, the Spaniard has won at least one of the nine events in the calendar every year except 2015.

In overcast, breezy conditions in the Italian capital, Nadal built a 3-0 lead and took the opening set in 49 minutes.

He continued to work the athletic Tsitsipas, who won this month's Estoril Open and lost in the Madrid final to Djokovic last week, with some typically stylish, precise groundstokes into the corners.

Tsitsipas, who moved into the last four by virtue of Roger Federer's withdrawal through injury, had not dropped a set in the tournament and was seeking a fifth final this season, which would have taken him to fifth in the world rankings.

But Nadal was in masterful form and recorded his fourth win in five matches against the powerful world number seven.

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