If you’re a Gael Monfils fan, or a tennis fan, or just a fan of life—anything but a Kei Nishikori fan, really—I’d recommend keeping a video handy of the third-set tiebreaker that those two players contested in Montreal on Wednesday. Whenever you want to be reminded of how good tennis can make a player, a crowd or yourself feel, you can fire up those 14 points.
When you do, you’ll see Monfils pull off the nearly impossible: He comes back from 2-6 down, saving four straight match points and winning the last six points—three of them with outrageous, go-big-or-go-home winners from at, or behind, the baseline—for the win. What made it seem even less possible was the identity of the two players. Monfils was 0-3 against Nishikori, and twice in 2016 their roles had been reversed: In Miami and Rio, it had been Nishikori who had come from behind to nose out Monfils in a deciding tiebreaker.
What made Wednesday’s finale essential viewing were Monfils’ reactions to his winners. At 3-6, after tracking down half a dozen strong shots from Nishikori that looked like they could go for winners, Monfils painted the line with a backhand and nearly collapsed—in exhaustion and laughter. At 5-6, after raring back and sending a forehand dive-bombing into the corner for another winner, Monfils wiggled and shimmied joyously, as if he had lost control of his body. Finally, at 7-6, on his first match point, he rocketed one more forehand winner and let out one more celebratory scream as the audience stood to cheer the improbable sight they had just witnessed.