The Asian Age

King Rafa reigns supreme

-

Spaniard Rafael Nadal is king of French clay. Virtually unbeatable on a surface that demands the most of any player’s strength and stamina, Nadal achieved a perfect 10 in Grand Slam titles at Roland Garros. This feat is a testament to the tenacity and lasting prowess of a fine athlete with a boxer’s movements. He boasts of a phenomenal 79-2 record in the French Open, which demands tennis of the highest intensity as the slow surface precludes a more attacking game such as seen in Wimbledon. When fully fit, Nadal is a tuned-to-the-minute athlete with Job’s patience in putting himself on the baseline and slugging it out, point by excruciati­ng point.

As winner of 15 Grand Slams, Nadal demands respect as an all-rounder. His record may, however, show a bias to the French Open, his 10 titles in 13 years in Paris making him an adopted French icon. The way in which he shut out Switzerlan­d’s Stan Wawrinka in the final was more an execution than tennis competitio­n. Mats Wilander, a three-time Paris winner, acknowledg­es winning titles at Roland Garros is a most challengin­g task, physically and mentally, and to win 10 times is one of sport’s greatest achievemen­ts. Along with Roger Federer, to whom he lost in the Australian Open this year, Nadal represents the older generation — gracious on court and still capable of beating the world’s best. To make age seem insignific­ant in the modern age of power racquets and supreme fitness regimes is a phenomenal achievemen­t. There will always be a special place for such champions in tennis’ pantheon.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India