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Nadal can tie Federer’s 20 Slams with win in Paris

- By Howard Fendrich

For all of the many qualities contributi­ng to Rafael Nadal’s unpreceden­ted superiorit­y at the French Open — the bullwhip of a high- bouncing lefty forehand, the reflex returns, the cover-every-corner athleticis­m, the endless energy and grit — there’s one element that stands above all the rest.

According to the opponent Nadal beat in the last two finals in Paris, anyway.

“You go into the match knowing that even your best tennis, even if you play it over three, four hours, might not be enough. I mean, if you do it, you maybe have a little chance, but you have to go to your limit on every single rally, every single point,” Dominic Thiem, who won the U.S. Open less than two weeks ago, said.

“That makes it not easy to go into the match,” Thiem said. “And that’s the mental part, I guess.”

When main- draw competitio­n begins Sunday at Roland Garros, Thiem and every other player in the men’s bracket will be pursuing Nadal as the 34-yearold from Spain pursues history.

If Nadal manages to claim a 13th French Open championsh­ip

— extending his own record for the most singles trophies won by anyone at any major tennis tournament — he would, more significan­tly, also collect his 20th Grand Slam title overall, tying Roger Federer’s record for a man.

Nadal’s tally elsewhere: four U.S. Opens, two Wimbledons, one Australian Open.

He spoke Friday in Paris about what “probably are the most difficult conditions for me ever in Roland Garros” — a lack of matches in 2020; a new brand of tennis balls (“super slow,

heavy”); cooler weather and plenty of rain in the forecast.

“But you know what?” Nadal said. “I am here to fight and to play with the highest intensity possible.”

Asked recently about the possibilit­y of catching the 39-yearold Federer, out for the rest of the season after a pair of operations on his right knee, Nadal expressed a sentiment he’s uttered before.

Climbing the Grand Slam list, Nadal said, is “not an obsession at all.”

“I know that you put a lot of attention on all of this,” he replied when the topic was raised last week at the Italian Open, Nadal’s first tournament since February because of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

“Of course I would love to finish my career with 25, but ( that’s) something that probably will not happen. I’m going to keep fighting to produce chances, and then when I finish my career, let’s see, no?” he said. “I just want to keep enjoying tennis. And that’s it. If I am playing well, I know I normally have my chances. If not, going to be impossible. That’s it.”

There is, of course, another great of the game playing during this era and, like Nadal, gaining on Federer.

That would be No. 1-ranked Novak Djokovic, who had won five of seven major titles to raise his total to 17 before being disqualifi­ed at the U. S. Open for accidental­ly hitting a line judge with a ball while walking to a changeover.

In this oddest of years, the Grand Slam season will drawing to a close in France; the claycourt major was postponed from May until now because of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

 ?? AP - Petr David Josek, file ?? Rafael Nadal can tie Roger Federer’s mark of 20 career Grand Slam titles by winning the French Open, an event he has won 12 times.
AP - Petr David Josek, file Rafael Nadal can tie Roger Federer’s mark of 20 career Grand Slam titles by winning the French Open, an event he has won 12 times.

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