INDIAN WELLS, Calif. — Rafael Nadal watched Juan Martin del Potro’s last shot sail wide  on his fourth match point and collapsed flat on his back. He wasn’t down  for long, bouncing back up to celebrate his third title in four  tournaments since coming back from a knee injury. Nadal rallied  from a set and 1-3 down in the second to win 4-6, 6-3, 6-4 in the BNP  Paribas Open final on Sunday, capping an amazing 1½-month run since his  seven-month layoff ended in February. “Seriously, it’s impossible to have better comeback, no?” he said, smiling. “Happy for everything.” Nadal  improved to a career-best 17-1 on the year, including 14 straight match  wins. He’s won three titles — two on clay while runner-up in another on  his favorite surface — and now his first on hard courts since Tokyo in  October 2010. He had lost six previous finals on the surface. “That’s  makes emotional week for me,” he said. “Very important victory for me,  winning against the best players of the world on a surface that is good  for them.” Maria Sharapova defeated Caroline Wozniacki 6-2, 6-2 to  win her first title of the year in the women’s final between two former  top-ranked players. Nadal won his 600th career match and will  move to No. 4 in the rankings released Monday. He broke a tie with Roger  Federer with his record 22nd career ATP Tour Masters 1000 title while  earning $1 million for his third Indian Wells title. “When you  have one comeback like I’m having you remember all the low things, lower  moments that you had during this seven months, doubts and all these  things,” he said. “The doubt when and where you will be able to be back  on a tennis tournament is hard.” Nadal defeated Federer in  straight sets in the quarterfinals, then took out Tomas Berdych in two  sets in the semis. Against Del Potro, Nadal rolled to an early lead in a  match that was marked by several momentum swings. Nadal served three love games in the third set, capping his last one with a 123-mph ace that gave him a 5-3 lead. Del  Potro came from love-40 down and fought off three match points to hold  at 5-4. But Nadal served out the match, dropping just one point in the  final game of the 2½-hour match in the desert heat. “I try to put  the match in a little bit slower rhythm and wait for the right moments  to go for the point and worked well,” he said. “Del Potro is a fantastic  player, so it’s not easy to change the dynamic of the match like this.” Del  Potro saved three break points to lead 1-0 in the third. Nadal held at  love, taking three games in a row for a 3-1 lead that he never gave up. After falling behind 3-0, Del Potro won eight of the next nine games to claim the opening set and take a 2-0 lead in the second. “I  was wrong in strategy for moments, something that for me is not usual,  because normally I can have mistakes with the shots but with the tactics  and the how I have to manage the points, how I have to play the points,  normally I am right,” Nadal said. Del Potro went up 3-1 before Nadal won the final five games and the set 6-3 on a 105-mph ace that capped a love service game. After  Nadal picked himself up, he hugged Del Potro, then trotted behind the  baseline to clasp hands with billionaire tournament owner Larry Ellison  of Oracle Corp. before falling to his knees near the net and raising his  arms in celebration. Nadal playfully took a bite out of the Baccarat  crystal trophy. Del Potro came up short in his bid to beat three  Top-10 players in the same tournament for the second time in his career.  He defeated No. 3 Andy Murray and No. 1 Novak Djokovic in three sets  apiece in becoming the second Argentine since Guillermo Villas in 1977  to reach the final here. Sharapova dictated from the opening game,  when she broke Wozniacki at love with groundstrokes that had the Dane  running from side to side. Sharapova faced just two break points on her  serve in the nearly 1½-hour match. “I always felt like I was  always a foot ahead, especially with the breaks,” she said. “I was able  to serve well today, and that helped me.” It was Sharapova’s  second career title at Indian Wells, where she first won in 2006.  Wozniacki won here in 2011. The women met in a final for the first time;  their six other matches came in earlier rounds. The Russian is  projected to move one spot in the WTA Tour rankings to No. 2 on Monday,  dropping Victoria Azarenka to third. Wozniacki will move up one spot to  No. 9. The victory, worth $1 million, gave Sharapova at least one title for 11 straight years dating to 2003. Sharapova  led 2-1 when Wozniacki brought her coach-dad Piotr out during a break.  But she couldn’t get untracked, and was broken again in the seventh  game. Sharapova fought off two break points to take the first set in 38  minutes. “She was putting pressure on me from the start. She was  serving very well,” Wozniacki said. “I felt like everything that she  wanted to do today was going in. She was making very few errors, and if  she did, then it was really at the times where it didn’t really matter.” Sharapova  broke to open the second set when Wozniacki double-faulted the game  away. She converted her fourth break point on Wozniacki’s backhand error  to take a 5-3 lead. Sharapova was aggressive in her approach, using her  forehand to push Wozniacki around and then coming in on short balls to  easily put them away.
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