The Mail on Sunday

Nadal KOs Norrie as Brits fall short

- By Mike Dickson TENNIS CORRESPOND­ENT

SOMEWHERE Roger Federer might have been looking on anxiously as Rafael Nadal sent the last British singles player packing from the Australian Open.

Nadal is now four wins away from overtaking the Swiss master’s total of 20 Grand Slam titles, and if he pulls that off next week then Cam Norrie can say he played a small part.

The British No 3 put in an admirable performanc­e in dragging the best level seen from the Spaniard so far this fortnight, but was powerless to prevent a 7- 5, 6- 2, 7- 5 third-round defeat.

When Nadal takes on Fabio Fognini in the last sixteen, the mercurial Italian will be trying to stop him winning a tenth consecutiv­e straight-sets victory at a Major.

Ominously, having seen off Norrie in a deserted Rod Laver Arena due to the restored lockdown in Melbourne, the world No 2 reported a clean bill of health for his troublesom­e back.

‘I was not serving my normal serve for the last 15 days,’ said Nadal. ‘Today is the first day that I started to serve again my normal serve. Yesterday I didn’t practice, today I just warmed up with the new, normal movement. The biggest victory is the back is better for the first time today.’

Norrie got the first break of the match to lead 3-2, but his opponent cancelled that out immediatel­y and was imperious in gaining a 17th straight win over a fellow left-hander.

He was generous about hi s Briti s h opponent afterwards, saying: ‘He’s brave. His serve worked quite well, especially the first serve. And then he has a very flat backhand. I think he has a complete game.’

On this week’s evidence, Norrie ought to be going higher than his current ranking of 64. And in making the third round, he added a fig leaf of respectabi­lity to another decidedly mediocre Grand Slam in singles for the Brits. Kyle Edmund was injured again, while Andy Murray was not allowed to travel after his positive Covid-19 test. Last night, he reached the final of a Challenger event in Biella, northern Italy, beating Mathias Bourgue 6-0, 7-5. He will play Ilya Marchenko today.

This will be the eighth out the last 11 Grand Slams in which no Brit has made the second week of the singles, although at least for Norrie it should prove a building block.

‘It was good experience to play a big dog like Rafa,’ he said. ‘If I didn’t get the return in the right place and he was getting on a forehand, I was almost dead in the rally.’

The tournament is now deserted due to a five-day lockdown caused by a local Covid outbreak. There was also the concerning developmen­t of Greek player Michail Pervolarak­is testing positive at an event in South Africa, having left Melbourne last week.

Tournament­s and players face a tricky few months ahead with their schedules and limited options. For Putney-based Norrie it means being resigned to not getting home until April at the earliest.

‘My plan was never to go back to the UK. I was going to play tournament­s and up until Miami (late next month),’ he said.

‘I will not be going back any time soon, and I think it’s going to be tough for the British guys to go home at all. As soon as you do that, with 10 days’ quarantine, you’re going to lose a lot of momentum and a lot of your training and physicalit­y.’

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