Nadal, Djokovic facing major tests in clay season start
MONTE CARLO, Principality of Monaco: Rafael Nadal and Novak Djokovic will face key physical and mental tests as the European clay-court season kicks off on Sunday at the Monte Carlo Masters.
For 11-time tournament champion Nadal, it’s all about his troublesome left knee.
For Djokovic, the major goal will be to emerge from a minor slump which left the world number one short of the quarterfinals at both the Indian Wells and Miami Masters events last month.
The Serb, embroiled in ATP political issues as president of the Player Council, has admitted to recent distractions. “I just had way too many things off the court. I guess that affected me a little bit on the court,” he said after going out in the last 16 in Miami.
Djokovic has plenty on the line at his home base in Monaco, with the 31-year-old looking ahead to completing a possible “Djoko Slam” with a French Open title in two months. He collected trophies at Wimbledon, the US Open and Australian Open last January.
“I grew up on clay, so I like playing on it, though statistically hard court was always my most successful surface,” Djokovic said.
While revealing no details, the winner of 15 Grand Slam titles admitted that he was not particularly fit for the American hardcourt swing.
“I didn’t feel my best healthwise, as well, in Indian Wells and Miami. But, hey, look, you learn that’s life.”
The Nadal camp has put a positive spin on the condition of Spain’s king of clay, posting on social media footage of a final practice session before he left his Mallorca home to train at the Monte Carlo Country Club.
The 17-time Grand Slam winner, and defending champion here, has not competed since withdrawing from his semi-final clash against Roger Federer at Indian Wells a month ago.
The distraught Spaniard flew home for medical tests and can only hope that his chronically bad left knee will hold up in the gruelling run to Roland Garros, which begins May 26.
Nadal is defending a massive haul of more than 4,000 ranking points from 2018, thanks to titles in Monte Carlo, Barcelona, Rome and Paris.
But injury also blighted him last season, with the Spaniard only able to compete on a limited basis.
“It’s tough to play only nine events a year and to finish only seven,” he said. “In times of injuries, I want to suffer less.”
Federer is again skipping the renowned event, with the 37year-old set for a return to clay for the first time since 2016 when he plays next month at Madrid prior to returning to Roland Garros.
I just had way too many things off the court. I guess that affected me a little bit on the court. — Novak Djokovic, world number one