Business Day

Time to let go:

- Martyn Herman Paris

Rafa 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.

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 “The nerves and adrenaline I feel on this court is impossible to compare.”

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

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 afterburne­rs. 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 single-handed 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.

After Nadal sealed the second set both players left the court while court staff watered down the red dust.

Nadal surged two breaks ahead in the third set despite the best efforts of Wawrinka to try to extend the contest.

 ?? /Reuters ?? Spain’s Rafael Nadal reacts after winning the final of the French Open at RolandGarr­os against Switzerlan­d’s Stan Wawrinka.
/Reuters Spain’s Rafael Nadal reacts after winning the final of the French Open at RolandGarr­os against Switzerlan­d’s Stan Wawrinka.
 ??  ?? Rafael Nadal
Rafael Nadal

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