King Nadal continues Paris reign with record-equalling 20th Slam
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[October 12, 2020]
PARIS (Reuters) - Spaniard
Rafael Nadal inflicted one of the most humiliating defeats on great
rival Novak Djokovic in the French Open final on Sunday, thrashing
the world number one 6-0 6-2 7-5 to lift a record-equalling 20th
Grand Slam men's singles title.
Tennis fans would have been salivating at the prospect of another
epic clash in one of the sport's greatest rivalries but it proved to
be one of the most one-sided Grand Slam finals in the Open era under
the closed roof of Court Philippe Chatrier.
The roof, which made its debut at this year's rescheduled Grand
Slam, was closed just before the start of play, sending fans and
pundits on social media into a frenzy on which player would benefit
from the indoor conditions.
Most thought it would favour the Serbian's game against the
34-year-old Nadal, who was bidding for a 13th title on the red
claycourts at Roland Garros.
But Nadal adapted brilliantly as he has done all fortnight to the
new brand of balls and the much colder and wet conditions at this
year's event which started in late September rather than its usual
May-June slot due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
"Of course, we were hoping for a great final and this is not going
to go down as a great final. I am more surprised, I didn't think
Rafa was going to play this well," Eurosport tennis expert and
seven-times Grand Slam champion Mats Wilander said.
The stakes were high for both players in their ninth meeting in a
Grand Slam final - they were tied 4-4 previously - with the added
incentive of lifting another major trophy in the battle to be
considered the men's "Greatest of all time".
Nadal has now tied Roger Federer's haul of 20 majors with Djokovic,
the last active player to beat the Spaniard at Roland Garros, three
adrift.
"To win here means everything. I don't think today about the 20th
and equal Roger on this great number, today is just a Roland Garros
victory and that means everything to me," the world number two said.
"This love story I have with this city and this court is
unforgettable."
The 39-year-old Federer, who has been recovering from knee surgery
this year, congratulated his friend.
"As my greatest rival over many years, I believe we have pushed each
other to become better players," Federer posted on Twitter, along
with a photo of him with Nadal.
"Therefore it is a true honour for me to congratulate him on his
20th Grand Slam victory."
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Spain’s Rafael Nadal celebrates with the trophy after winning the
French Open final against Serbia’s Novak Djokovic REUTERS/Christian
Hartmann
DOOR SHUT
Before the match Djokovic had said Roland Garros was Nadal's home
and the Spaniard did not once leave the door ajar for the Serbian to
make a comeback into the match.
Djokovic, 33, who had won five Grand Slam finals in a row since
losing to Stan Wawrinka at the 2016 U.S. Open, still leads Nadal
29-27 in career meetings but the scar of Sunday's defeat will run
deep.
The drop shots on the slow claycourts served Djokovic well in
earlier rounds and he used plenty of them in his opening game on
Sunday but Nadal ran most of them down, blunting the Serbian's
weapon and gameplan.
Djokovic struggled with his first serve and was unable to come up
with a Plan B as Nadal continued to be the aggressor while making
just two unforced errors in the opening set to hand his opponent a
rare bagel in the opening set.
Nadal showed exemplary athleticism and court coverage to get his
racket to Djokovic's crunching groundstrokes as the bewildered
Serbian watched on, fast running out of ideas on how to win
important points.
In the second set there was no letup in intensity from Nadal, who
continued to hit deep returns to keep his opponent pinned to the
back of the baseline.
Djokovic got on the board at the start of the second set after
managing to save three breakpoints but Nadal maintained his iron
grip by breaking the Serbian's next two service games to take a 2-0
lead in the match.
In a high-quality third set, Djokovic broke Nadal's serve for the
first time for 3-3 but dropped serve on a double fault in the 11th
game before the left-hander went on to bag his 100th victory at
Roland Garros with an ace.
"Today you showed why you are the king of clay. Today was a tough
match, I was outplayed by a better player today," said Djokovic
after losing his third final to Nadal at Roland Garros.
"He did surprise me with the way he was playing, the quality of
tennis he was producing, the level. He's phenomenal. He played a
perfect match, especially in the first two sets."
(Reporting by Sudipto Ganguly in Mumbai; Editing by Christian
Radnedge and Ed Osmond)
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