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Safin wins China Open Alastair Himmer | September 19, 2004 21:35 IST Russian Marat Safin won his first title in almost two years with a gritty 7-6, 7-5 victory over compatriot Mikhail Youzhny at the China Open on Sunday. The powerful former world number one, who did not drop a set in Beijing, needed all his experience to claim his first title since winning in Paris in November 2002. "It's a little bit of a strange feeling," said Safin. "You get to the final and play another Russian who has nothing to lose and is playing incredible. I thought maybe not this time. "It's going to take time to realise what happened, that I won a tournament -- you forget this feeling." Fifth seed Safin recovered after surrendering his serve in the opening game, levelling the first set at 4-4 with a piercing forehand. He then seized control in the tiebreak, serving four aces to take it 7-4 and leave Youzhny shell-shocked. The second set went with serve until Safin broke through in the 11th game, Youzhny's nerve crumbling as he double-faulted on break point. CRUNCHING SERVE Safin, runner-up at the Australian Open and on clay in Estoril this year, converted his first match point with another crunching serve after one hour 37 minutes. "I was 30-love up and I made two stupid mistakes," said Youzhny. "If I played more finals, maybe I wouldn't have these mistakes. I was close...but I prefer to play bad and win." Safin earned $69,200 for his 12th career victory and edged above Andre Agassi into eighth in the 2004 ATP Champions Race. The top eight players qualify for the season-ending Tennis Masters Cup in Houston. Safin, the 2000 U.S. Open champion, has struggled for consistency after an injury-plagued 2003. "It feels great. Hopefully, this won't be the last win for me," said the 24-year-old. "It's not like party time now. I hope I can get to the Masters Cup and keep winning. You need to build your confidence." Youzhny had beaten three seeded players -- Rainer Schuettler, Dominik Hrbaty and Paradorn Srichaphan -- on his way to the final of the inaugural $500,000 tournament but he just came up short against fellow Muscovite Safin. The 22-year-old, who was bidding for his second career title, earned $40,700 for reaching his third final.
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