Juan Martin del Potro saved three match points in a thrilling BNP Paribas Open final on Sunday at Indian Wells in the U.S. before beating world number one Roger Federer.
The win handed the Swiss his first loss of the year and helped del Potro to claim his maiden Masters 1000 title.
The Argentine stunned a raucous Indian Wells crowd which had been loudly backing Federer to continue his winning streak.
He secured the biggest win in the nine years since his U.S. Open title triumph with a 6-4 6-7(8) 7-6(2) victory.
Federer, the defending champion, had chalked up 17 consecutive wins in 2018, a run which included his 20th Grand Slam title at the Australian Open.
But he was unable to outlast his determined 29-year-old opponent who was considered a genuine threat to hiss dominance of the game when he won at Flushing Meadows in 2009.
However, del Potro has been dogged since by a series of wrist problems which almost ended his career.
“I’m still shaking I’m so nervous. It’s difficult to describe with words, it’s like a dream,” del Potro said on court after extending his own winning streak to 11 matches.
“I’ve been working hard to get this, and I did it after all my problems, all my surgeries. I can’t believe I’m here and winning a Masters 1000, beating Roger. It’s amazing.”
Beating Federer has never been easy — del Potro had succeeded just six times in 24 previous attempts.
The nail-biting final match lasted almost three hours with both players taking occasional issue with the chair umpire.
Del Potro arrived in the Californian desert on the back of a title win in Acapulco but had far from a smooth ride against an agitated Federer.
The Swiss simply would not give up on his quest for a sixth Indian Wells title.
The Argentine seized the opening set and had a match point in the second set tie-break but misfired on a forehand – usually his most dependable weapon.
This allowed the 36-year-old Swiss back into the match.
“I was thinking about (that) forehand miss the entire time,” del Potro said.
With Federer on top 6-5 in the second set tie-break, he appeared to fire an ace to clinch the set.
But a late challenge by del Potro overturned the call and the Swiss was double-faulted.
It all led to an annoyed Federer barking at the umpire during a changeover.
Fired up by his grievance, the Swiss took the second set to even up the contest before pushing del Potro to the limits in the final stanza.
The third set went with serve until Federer blasted a cross-court winner to break del Potro’s serve and take a 5-4 advantage.
It helped to break a run of 32 consecutive service game wins for the Argentine.
The Swiss maestro served for the set, and the title, but del Potro dug deep to save three match points, two at 40-15 down.
“I lost my serve a little bit, and then he was clean and I wasn’t. And then it goes very quickly in the breaker,” Federer said.
“As close as it can be sometimes when you’re not feeling it or momentum has shifted, it’s just crazy how it can go the other way.”(Reuters/NAN)