Thursday, June 12, 2014

Rafa Nadal - Reaching the Highest of Expectations







Maybe it was around 2007, when Nadal won his third French Open without much fuss against Roger Federer, beating Fed for the 2nd straight time in a Final, 3rd straight time at the French Open, and doing it rather easily. Nadal did lose a set, his first in the tournament, but unlike in the 2006 Final, when Fed blitzed Nadal 6-1 in the opening set, this was more a momentary lapse of concentration by Nadal. It was around this time that the question was beginning to be asked – just how many French Opens can Rafa Nadal actually win? The wildest guesses at the time were probably 10. It made some sense. Nadal had just turned 21. Federer seemed to be the world’s 2nd best clay court player, and he wasn’t close to Nadal. Why not 10? Somehow, that may have been an underestimate.

Rafael Nadal, without playing his best tennis, just won his 9th French Open. It already seems a little absurd. People may have wondered and dreamed Nadal would do this, but Rafa actually did. Nadal won his 9th French Open Title, and in all but one run (2010) he had to either beat Roger Federer or Novak Djokovic. He beat both three times (’06-’08). Nadal has played in a very competitive time in tennis. He’s also dominated this particular surface, and more importantly, that particular tournament so much the competition doesn’t matter. Rafael Nadal is calling his shot at Roland Garros. It has become increasingly likely he’ll win as many as he wants, competition be damned.

It didn’t always look like this. Nadal was a perfect clay court player from 2005-2008, his first run of dominance. That was the period he was wearing sleeveless shirts and cargo pants, and ran faster and harder than anyone, and hit looping defensive shots and pounded Federer’s backhand like it was a punching bag. That style was ruthlessly effective. Thing is, Rafa Nadal has now changed his game, gotten older, and become even more dominant at the tournament. He responded to his first, and still only, loss at the French Open to rededicate his game to offense, to shorter points, to dictating with the forehand instead of staying with the tried and true of pounding away at backhands. He did it all to make himself more viable at the other tournaments really, and to save his legs on hardcourt. Strange thing happened, though, it didn’t make him any worse at the French.

Watching yesterday’s match against Novak Djokovic, there were a couple immediate takeaways. The first is still no one can attack Nadal’s forehand with their backhand like Djokovic, a relative advantage that will likely never have the effect it had in Djokovic’s incredible 2011 season, but still be effective. The other is that it takes a superhuman effort to get just a set of Nadal. Rafa didn’t play very well in the first set and Novak did. Then, almost literally like a swtich, Nadal turned it on in the 2nd and then didn’t only outplay Novak, he out-attacked him. Nadal ended up with more winners, fewer unforced errors, dominated Djokovic’s 2nd serve and won most of his own 2nd serve points. Only a surprising mental dip cost him an easy 4th set, but he won anyway. By the end, Novak looked broken, far more so than in previous losses to Nadal. Even last year’s epic 5-set loss, a loss that ended a tournament in which he dedicated to his first coach who had recently died, Novak didn’t seem as down as he did this time.

In a way, that makes sense. Last year, Nadal entered the French with just two losses on the season. One was to Djokovic at Monte Carlo, but Nadal was dominant in the French coming into that semifinal. He also, quietly, wildly outplayed Djokovic in that match. He had 15 more winners and fewer unforced errors. He won dominant sets while Djokovic pulled his two sets out of thin air. Novak did come close to winning, but he didn’t play well enough to really deserve it. In a way, it was the opposite of the classic 6-hour 2012 Australian Open Final, which Djokovic nearly blew despite playing reasonably better. Last year’s 5-set semifinal also continued the 5-match trend of Djokovic getting closer and closer. His first matchup against Nadal at the French was in 2006, and Djokovic retired after losing the first two sets. The next two years he lost in straight sets in the Semifinals. In 2012, he played the Final against Nadal and won a set against him for the first time at the French but lost. Then was last year. Now, for the first time, the trend reversed itself.

Nadal was beatable this year. He had been rusty all season ever since his at-the-time shocking loss to Stan Wawrinka in the Australian Open. He had won just one tournament all year long, the Madrid Masters, where he didn’t have the toughest path. He lost to Djokovic rather meekly in the Rome Final. He lost early at clay events. For the first time since 2005, Nadal was not the bettors favorite heading into the tournament, Novak was. All that, and he was further away to winning this year than last. The Nadal hurdle must seem gigantic to Djokovic right now, somewhat where it was for Federer back in 2008.

Federer ended up winning a French Open, completing his career slam, the next year. Of course, he didn’t have to go through Nadal. Maybe Djokovic gets that lucky, maybe someone else takes out Rafa next year. Maybe Rafa’s knees act up, but it is becoming less likely not more. Since returning to the tour after seven months off last February, Nadal hasn’t expressed any issues ever with his knees. He seems to be physically in the best shape he has been since 2010-11. He looks healthy and confident. He’s changed his game to play even shorter points. It was odd to see Rafa have such a healthy edge in winning short points but losing the longer rallies to Novak. Nadal wants to play these shorter points now, he wants to attack. It will keep his career going longer and also keep him winning.

The one cause for concern with the ‘Nadal will win 10 French Opens!’ crowd back in 2007 was his physical style of play could end his career early. While those fears were definitely not unfounded, as he’s missed more time than the other big stars (save for Del Potro) since he first injured his knees in 2009, he seems fine now. I think the Rafa detractors back in 2007 didn’t think he would be this good in 2014. He just turned 28 during the French Open, and seems fine. Now, Roger Federer also won his 14th major at 28 and has won just three since, but when Federer was 28, Nadal and DJokovic were squarely in their primes. Right now, there are no up-and-coming guys Nadal has to be all that worried about. The biggest worry is still Novak.

Djokovic will likely never reach the level he had in 2011 again. That said, he still continues to beat Nadal consistently, especially in best of three matches. His problem now is best of 5. In a way, that is everyone’s problem with Nadal. Nadal has won his last four Grand Slam matches against Djokovic, including three straight in Finals. In fact, one of the most impressive stats of Nadal’s career is his record in Grand Slam matches against the other big three. He is now 9-3 against Djokovic to go along with a 9-2 mark against Federer and a 7-2 against Murray. Overall, that is a tidy 25-7 in Grand Slams, and even if you remove the French Open he’s 12-7, with at least a .500 record against all three. Rafael Nadal may not get to Federer’s 17 slams, and he won’t touch some of the records Federer put up, like winning three majors four times, or making 23 straight semifinals. Heck, even Novak DJokovic has gotten to the Semifinals of a Slam more times given the amount Nadal has lost to injury. That said, Rafael Nadal has the edge over basically everyone head-to-head. He has a winning record against everyone in the Top-25. And he has that 25-7 mark against the Big 3.

Rafael Nadal is definitely not underappreciated. The only people that decry his achievement are rather obvious trolls. They still call him a defensive one-trick pony who can only win on clay, despite his three slam wins on Hard Court and two on Grass. Nadal, though, has lived up to everyone’s best expectations of him. He’s dominated the French Open in the way most hoped he could, winning 9 of ten, winning 197 sets and dropping just 20 in his 67 French Open matches. He’s changed and adjusted his game to become an all-around force and a great player on every surface. Rafael Nadal is one of the Top-5 Players ever, but his achievements and consistency on clay is still stunning. He never gets tired of the surface, never drops in intensity, he reacted to winning his 9th French Open like he did his 2nd, and the emotion he showed when the National Anthem of Spain was playing was real.

He might be done winning French Opens. You never know what will happen when a tennis player gets closer and closer to 30. You never know with his medical history. You never know when someone’s desire will finally fade. That all said, if anyone’s desire will last it is Nadal’s. No one is a harder competitor. No one makes the most of every point more than him. One last stat before Rafa and the Tennis World heads off to Wimbledon (where Rafa, ironically enough, will try to end a 2-game losing streak), Nadal has won his last 12 Semifinals at majors. Now, there’s a caveat that he’s lost before the semis three times in that streak, but the 12-consecutive wins in the Semifinal Round is longer than any streak Fed had (10) and Novak’s longest is four. For his career, Nadal is 20-3 in the Semifinals of a major, which blows away Federer’s 24-10 mark, or Novak’s 13-9 mark. If you are going to beat Nadal it will have to be because you outplay him at the very end, and he’s made himself about as hard to outplay as possible, and impossible to on clay.

Where it all began, one Champion to another back in 2005

About Me

I am a man who will go by the moniker dmstorm22, or StormyD, but not really StormyD. I'll talk about sports, mainly football, sometimes TV, sometimes other random things, sometimes even bring out some lists (a lot, lot, lot of lists). Enjoy.