David Ferrer has joined Australian great Roy Emerson as the most successful player in the history of the Heineken Open.
The world No 5 claimed his third-straight title and fourth overall to equal the records set by Emerson in the 1960s. Given Ferrer's form over the past few years and his connection with Auckland, it wouldn't be a surprise to see him set a new bar in 2014 and he immediately vowed to return next year.
Ferrer's relentlessness is his main weapon and he used it to good effect over second seed Philipp Kohlschreiber in his 7-6 6-1 victory. The German had his chances in the match, breaking Ferrer twice in the first set and serving for the set before Ferrer worked his way back into things.
The Spaniard took the first set in a tiebreaker (7-5) and then put the hammer down in the second set to race away with the title in one hour 18 minutes.
"It is amazing for me to win four times now,'' Ferrer said. "I can say this is my favourite tournament for sure.