Times of Oman

Nadal completes ‘La Decima’ with brutal rout of Wawrinka

Rewinding the clock to the days when he was untouchabl­e on the crushed brick dust, Nadal turned 2015 champion Wawrinka into a human punchbag, winning in just over two hours

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PARIS: Claycourt king Rafael Nadal regained his Roland Garros throne after two years in exile with a brutal 6-2, 6-3, 6-1 mauling of Swiss Stan Wawrinka to complete ‘La Decima’ on Sunday.

Rewinding the clock to the days when he was untouchabl­e on the crushed brick dust, the 31-year-old turned 2015 champion Wawrinka into a human punchbag, winning in just over two hours.

This title, an unpreceden­ted 10th at a single Grand Slam in the profession­al era, was arguably the most impressive of his 15 though as it arrived three injury-plagued years after the last one, without dropping a set and conceding only 35 games in seven matches.

Only Bjorn Borg, who conceded 32 on his way to the 1978 title, has been a more ruthless champion.

Having beaten world No. 1 Andy Murray with a majestic display of power in the semifinal, third seed Wawrinka arrived full of confi- dence as, at 32, he tried to become the oldest French Open winner since Andres Gimeno in 1972.

But the barrel-chested ‘Stanimal’ was powerless as Nadal turned the final into an exhibition of his clayclourt supremacy — taking his French Open record to an eye-watering 79-2. As a weary Wawrinka sliced a volley into the net on match point Nadal collapsed on his back on the baseline.

“I’m a little emotional,” Nadal said before getting to clamp his jaws on La Coupe des Mousquetai­res. “The nerves and adrenaline I feel on this court is impossible to compare.”

Straw hats and fans were de rigueur for an expectant Court Philippe Chatrier as the final began with temperatur­es hovering around the 30 degrees Celcius mark — perfect conditions for Nadal’s trademark monstrous topspin game.

Wawrinka, who spent nearly five hours more on court than Nadal to reach the final, looked tentative and heavy-legged although he did have a glimmer in the third game when Nadal was forced to save a break point.

First blood

Nadal failed to convert any of the four break points he had in the following game, but drew first blood the next time an opportunit­y arose to take a 4-2 lead.

Then he switched on the after- burners. A matter of minutes later Wawrinka wafted a forehand long to hand Nadal a second break of serve and the opening set.

Wawrinka was flat, striking not a single winner off his glorious singlehand­ed backhand in the first set, and with less than an hour on the clock his task already looked forlorn. Nadal was given a time violation warning at the start of the second, but Wawrinka could not halt his charge as the Spaniard bounded into a 3-0 lead in the second having won seven games in a row.

With the crowd attempting to lift Wawrinka he stopped the rot to hold, firing himself up with a roar of “C’mon”.

 ?? – Reuters ?? ‘A LITTLE EMOTIONAL’: Spain’s Rafael Nadal celebrates with the trophy after defeating Switzerlan­d’s Stan Wawrinka in the final of the French Open at Roland Garros in Paris on Sunday.
– Reuters ‘A LITTLE EMOTIONAL’: Spain’s Rafael Nadal celebrates with the trophy after defeating Switzerlan­d’s Stan Wawrinka in the final of the French Open at Roland Garros in Paris on Sunday.
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