MELBOURNE, Australia -- Roger Federer had nowhere to hide.
Rod Laver was about to present the cup to Australian Open champion Rafael Nadal. Federer stood on the court, having just missed his first chance to equal Pete Sampras' record 14 Grand Slam singles titles.
He was sobbing. He couldn't speak.
"In the first moment, you're disappointed, you're shocked, you're sad, then all of a sudden it overwhelms you," Federer finally said, referring to his 7-5, 3-6, 7-6 (3), 3-6, 6-2 loss to Nadal in a momentum-swinging, 4-hour, 22-minute title match Sunday night. "The problem is you can't go in the locker room and just take it easy and take a cold shower. You're stuck out there. It's the worst feeling."
Nadal, the first Spanish man to win the Australian Open, beat Federer in Grand Slam finals on clay and grass last year. He added the missing link Sunday with his first major title on hard courts.
The 22-year-old Spaniard is 5-2 against Federer in championship matches at the majors -- 3-0 in the last three -- and 13-6 in career meetings. The most riveting was Nadal's five-set, 4-hour, 48-minute win over Federer at Wimbledon last year, ending the Swiss star's five-year reign on grass.
Now, 40 years after Rod Laver last won the Grand Slam -- all four majors in one season -- Nadal is the only man who can emulate him in 2009.
Federer had been the most likely of the recent contenders, missing by one in 2006 and 2007 -- losing to Nadal at Roland Garros both years. Clay remains his obstacle. And the French Open was the only major missing in Sampras' career.
"God, it's killing me," Federer said, crying, as he tried at first to accept the runner-up plate.
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