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Referring to the "very difficult" second half of 2009 -- which included knee and abdominal injuries, the only French Open loss of his career, his withdrawal from Wimbledon, and his parents' separation -- Nadal spoke about rebounding so strongly.
"I wanted a lot to be back," he said. "And now, I am better. I did better than before. That's very huge."
And yet, as well as Nadal has played since April -- 43-3 with six titles -- and for two weeks at Flushing Meadows -- coming within a second-set lapse against Djokovic of becoming the first man in a half-century to win the tournament without dropping a set -- he is hardly satisfied.
One example: He thinks he played only "so-so" at the start of the Open.
What still needs work, then?
Nadal sighed, then rattled off a serious "To Do" list:
Make sure his serve gets even better, even though he won 106 of 111 service games en route to the title, tying the tournament record for fewest lost.
Fine-tune his court positioning.
Improve his slice backhand and volleys.
And, he said, his backhand and forehand winners "can improve a little bit more."
"That's what's so frustrating, a little bit: He's getting better each time you play him," said Djokovic, the 2008 Australian Open champion and twice a runner-up in New York.
After jetting home to Spain on Tuesday, Nadal plans to take a break for two days, then return to the practice court Friday.
Barely gives the guy any time to think about his place in history.
[Associated Press;
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