Spain's
Rafael Nadal bites the trophy as he celebrates winning his tenth French Open
title against Switzerland's Stan Wawrinka in three sets, 6-2, 6-3, 6-1, during
their men's final match of the French Open tennis tournament at the Roland
Garros stadium in Paris, France on Sunday. Photo: APTennis
Nadal
up to No. 2; Djokovic
slides
to No. 4
PARIS
French Open champion Rafael Nadal moved up two spots to No. 2 in
the ATP rankings on Monday, his highest placing since October 2014.
Novak Djokovic, meanwhile, slid from No. 2 to No. 4 in the new
rankings, his lowest status in 7½ years. He lost in the quarterfinals at Roland
Garros, where he won the title a year ago to complete a career Grand Slam. That
was also his fourth consecutive major championship, but he failed to defend any
of those titles.
Andy Murray retained his No. 1 ranking after a semifinal exit in
Paris, while Stan Wawrinka stayed at No. 3 after losing to Nadal 6-2, 6-3, 6-1
in Sunday's final.
Roger Federer is still No. 5 after missing the French Open for the
second year in a row. Milos Raonic was 6th, Marin Cilic 7th, Dominic Thiem 8th
and Kei Nishikori, 9th.
Nadal's victory in Paris gave him a record 10th trophy at the
clay-court tournament and ended his three-year drought without a Grand Slam
title. He now has 15 major titles, breaking a tie with Pete Sampras for second
place among men on the all-time list behind Federer's 18.
Nadal was asked Sunday whether getting back to No. 1 in the
rankings is important to him. He has spent a total of 141 weeks there, most
recently in July 2014.
"I am playing well. I am in a good position. I just won the
most important event of the year for me, so that's the only thing that matters
today, no?" he said. "Winning these kind of titles, then you have
chances to become any number (in) the ranking."
By winning the women's championship at the French Open on Saturday
for the first tour-level title of her career, Jelena Ostapenko jumped from 47th
to a career-high 12th in the WTA rankings. The Latvian, who turned 20 during
the tournament, lost in the first round a year ago at Roland Garros.
French Open runner-up Simona Halep moved from No. 4 to No. 2.
Angelique Kerber kept the No. 1 spot, despite being beaten in the
first round in Paris. She is the first woman seeded No. 1 to lose in the French
Open's first round in the professional era, which began in 1968.
Serena Williams dropped two spots to No. 4. She is taking the rest
of this year off because she is pregnant.
Elina Svitolina, a quarterfinalist at the French Open, rose one
spot to a career-high No. 5.
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