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If he wins, Nadal will head to the Australian Open in January with a chance to pull off the "Rafa Slam" -- four major titles in a row, something nobody has done since Laver.
The steady rain came on what was supposed to be the last day of a tournament that was threatened by Hurricane Earl during the first week, then hammered by persistent winds the second. In all, though, there was only a single, 25-minute delay over the first 13 days.
Then came Sunday. Another rainout. Another day of rest at the tournament that's considered the biggest grind of all the Grand Slams because it's the only one that schedules semifinals and finals on back-to-back days.
While the men were warming up, the women's doubles final was halted in progress, with Liezel Huber and Nadia Petrova three points from victory at 5-4 in the third set against Vania King and Yaroslava Shvedova. With a thin mist falling, tournament referee Brian Earley and tournament director Brian Curley went on the Arthur Ashe Stadium court to check the conditions, determined the courts were too slick and sent the players to the locker room.
The doubles final was scheduled to resume Monday at 3 p.m. -- meaning the women will come back, warm up and, if Huber and Petrova get off to a good start, might only end up playing three points.
[Associated Press;
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