China Open: Rafael Nadal Storms Into Quarter-finals
Rafael Nadal, groping for form after a difficult year, will now face America's Jack Sock in the last-eight clash.
- Agence France-Presse
- Updated: October 07, 2015 10:50 pm IST
Rafael Nadal sparked his China Open campaign into life as he stormed into the quarter-finals with a much-improved 7-6 (7/3), 6-4 victory over Canada's Vasek Pospisil on Wednesday. (Tomas Berdych And Caroline Wozniacki Crash Out)
The 14-time Grand Slam winner had his service broken four times in the first round by China's 230th-ranked Wu Di, but he showed better signs against Pospisil, the world number 44.
Spain's Nadal, groping for form after a difficult year, will now face America's Jack Sock in the last eight as he looks for a confidence-boosting fourth title of the season.
Nadal also avoided joining world number five Tomas Berdych on the sidelines after the Czech, who won the rain-delayed Shenzhen Open on Monday, became the latest big name to fall in Beijing.
"Every improvement is important," said Nadal. "Obviously I improved from yesterday. I played a much better match than yesterday."
In their first career meeting, Nadal struggled to break down 25-year-old Pospisil in the opening set but he ran away with the tie-break to take the lead.
And he never looked like relinquishing it, breaking to go 3-2 ahead in the second set and sealing it on his second match point with a raking cross-court forehand, celebrating with his familiar fist-pump.
Air pollution which had hovered at hazardous levels magically lifted by the end of eighth-ranked Nadal's match, and his spirits would have risen too as he aims to fight his way back to the top.
"Every victory gives me opportunities to keep practising the things that I need to practice," said Nadal.
"Practising outside of the competition is very important, but at the end you have to compete well. Every match is an opportunity for me."
- 'Worst season ever' -
Earlier, and in much smoggier conditions, Berdych and Caroline Wozniacki both lost their way at a tournament which is proving a graveyard for senior players.
Second seed Berdych never hit his stride against Uruguay's 37th-ranked Pablo Cuevas as he was dumped out 6-4, 6-4 to become the rollercoaster tournament's latest upset.
"I made one tournament title. The other one didn't go my way," shrugged the Czech.
Later former world number one Wozniacki was brutally disposed of by Angelique Kerber 6-2, 6-3 in a defeat which ended her hopes of reaching the year-ending WTA Finals.
"I'm going home. I'm trying to catch a flight that is in a couple of hours," said Wozniacki, who was in no mood to hang around after her defeat.
Andrea Petkovic was also bundled out by Sara Errani 3-6, 6-3, 6-2, compounding a tough season which has included food poisoning, injury and a first-round defeat last week in Wuhan.
"After Wuhan, I said to my coach, this is the worst season I've ever played. That was my assessment after Wuhan. But I guess I was quite emotional after losing in first round," she said.
It was a different story for Garbine Muguruza, who retired from last week's Wuhan final against Venus Williams with an ankle problem but bounced back to beat Irina Falconi 6-2, 6-1.
The Spaniard, nicknamed "Mushroom" by Beijing fans because her name sounds like "mushroom" in Chinese, will now qualify for the WTA Finals if she wins her next match against Mirjana Lucic-Baroni.
Fourth seed Agnieszka Radwanska set up a quarter-final with Kerber after Madison Keys retired after their first set, becoming the sixth player to withdraw mid-match.