Wary of past pain, Nadal eyes third
Wimbledon title
Send a link to a friend
[June 27, 2019]
By Martyn Herman
LONDON (Reuters) - Rafa Nadal received
a degree of sympathy this week when he questioned a Wimbledon
seedings formula that relegated him down to third in this year's
draw despite a world ranking of two.
After all, he has been champion there twice, is bang in form after a
record-stretching 12th French Open, is injury free and last year was
a whisker away from reaching the final.
Despite that, the 33-year-old would be the first to admit that
despite twice lifting the trophy the All England Club's lawns have
not always been a happy hunting ground.
While his 2008 defeat of Roger Federer in a final for the ages
stands as one of his greatest days, shock losses at the hands of
Steve Darcis, Lucas Rozol, Dustin Brown and Gilles Muller represent
some of his darkest moments.
Wimbledon's low bouncing lawns also provide the ultimate test of the
creaky knees that disrupted Nadal's season this year and forced him
to withdraw from Miami.
It is why Nadal's excitement is tempered by a little trepidation
every time he heads to his most erratic Grand Slam and why there is
a sense of unfinished business.
After backing up his 2008 triumph by beating Tomas Berdych in the
2010 final and reaching the final again in 2011 -- Nadal then went
five visits without going past the fourth round.
Those dismissing his grasscourt prowess were forced to eat humble
pie last year when Nadal roared through to the semi-finals when he
lost 8-6 in the fifth set to Novak Djokovic in one of the
highest-quality matches ever seen on Centre Court.
With an exhausted Kevin Anderson waiting in the final Nadal's
chances of claiming a third Wimbledon crown were bright.
"Last year he was very close," uncle and former coach Toni Nadal
told Reuters this month in Mallorca. "If had beaten Djokovic I think
he would have won the final."
[to top of second column] |
Spain's Rafael Nadal celebrates during his semi final match against
Serbia's Novak Djokovic REUTERS/Andrew Boyers/File Photo
Nadal has again opted to play no competitive grasscourt matches in
the build-up to Wimbledon, preferring instead to practise in
Mallorca and then take part in the Aspall Classic exhibition event
at the swanky Hurlingham Club where on Wednesday he was soundly
beaten by Marin Cilic.
Not that Cilic was reading too much into that and even suggested
Nadal could be favorite to win the title and match Bjorn Borg's
record of winning Wimbledon immediately after winning the French on
three occasions.
"Rafa now winning the French Open I feel he might be a great
contender, compared even to Roger and Novak he might be, in my own
feeling, he might be slightly ahead. We'll see," Cilic said after
handing Nadal something of a grasscourt lesson.
Nadal will sharpen his game before Wimbledon starts and despite
being third favorite behind Djokovic and Federer, appears to be in
the mood to do some damage.
"I know I played a great event last year. I have been able to be
very close to win another title there. I love to play on grass," he
said shortly after claiming his 18th Grand Slam title by defeating
Dominic Thiem in Paris.
"Honestly, the last two years that I played in Wimbledon, I felt
close again."
(Reporting by Martyn Herman; editing by Sudipto Ganguly)
[© 2019 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2019 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|