Tomas Berdych slayed a data dragon—a 17-match losing streak to Rafael Nadal—with a comprehensive and impressive 6-2, 6-0, 7-6 (5) win over the Spaniard in the Australian Open quarterfinals. You can read about the match in detail, and see what the players had to say afterward, here, and Steve Tignor will publish his thoughts about the result and its ramifications later today.
As for this space, we’re going to dedicate it exclusively to Berdych. His previous win over Nadal came more than eight years ago, in the quarterfinals of the 2006 Madrid Masters. He’s done a lot of memorable things, both on and off the court, during that extended stretch of time. Seventeen come to mind:
Berdych celebrated his win over Nadal in Madrid not by raising his hands up high, but by raising a finger to his lips. The Czech showed the partisan Spanish crowd, which cheered his errors throughout the match, what he thought of them—which of course only made things worse. Whistles rained down on Berdych as he walked to the net to meet Nadal, who had words of his own after a curt handshake. A heated Rafa called his opponent “a bad person” for making the gesture, and the incident followed Berdych for years.