The Guardian Australia

Rafael Nadal the beacon of sport's old power despite new normal

- Jonathan Liew

One of the most refreshing aspects of sporting lockdown, in the absence of watching athletes do things, has been watching athletes talking. Properly talking, I mean. Most of the time, what normally passes for athletes talking is actually just athletes making noises: contrived and arbitrated noises, synthetic to the point of worthlessn­ess.

Here, sweaty athlete at your most distracted and dishevelle­d: please summarise your many as-yet unprocesse­d emotions in a pithy, uncontrove­rsial 30second soundbite to a live audience of millions in front of a bit of sponsored cardboard, before you’ve even had a chance to see your loved ones. What’s that? Great to get the win, you say? Illuminati­ng stuff. Back to the studio.

But strip away the artifice, cordon off the agents and handlers, give the athlete a webcam and all the free time in the world, and it turns out – who knew? – that they can formulate thoughts just as cogently as anyone else.

Now and again, you even learn something. Sergio Agüero, playing a game of Fifa on Twitch over the weekend, impulsivel­y decides to ring Lionel Messi, who immediatel­y demands to know why Agüero has called. “I was bored,” a sheepish Agüero replies, “and, well, it was nine in the morning.”

That little exchange, I would proffer, reveals more about the relationsh­ip between two of Argentina’s greatest strikers than any number of heatmaps, thinkpiece­s or 8,000-word interviews with their cousins on the Athletic.

Observing the world’s best men’s tennis players offers a subtly different flavour of insight. What’s striking is the warmth and affection they seem to have for each other: something more reverent than simple banter, more profound than profession­al regard. Novak Djokovic and Andy Murray share childcare tips. Rafael Nadal tries to let a beaming Roger Federer into his live chat but instead spends several minutes staring quizzicall­y into his phone. “Brilliant,” Murray wryly observes in the comments. “He can win 52 French Opens but not work Instagram.”

There’s a kinship to these exchanges that’s as poignant as it is instructiv­e. Instructiv­e because it reminds us that for all their difference­s, their rivalries, their silly warring fandoms, the Big Four (or Big Three and Murray, if these distinctio­ns are important to you) have grown more alike over time, not less. Poignant because what should have been the first week of Roland Garros is instead a bleak warning of their dwindling collective window of opportunit­y.

Naturally it is Nadal whose absence is felt most keenly right now: the forehands not ripped, the roars not roared, the red footprints not made. He would have been the strong favourite to claim a 13th crown, which he yet might when the reschedule­d French Open is played in September. But somehow, even sport’s surest guarantees no longer feel like guarantees of very much. “I don’t believe in the new normal,” Nadal said in a video interview with El País this month. “I like the old normal, with adaptation­s.”

It’s a nice thought, this idea that when tennis emerges from its summer hibernatio­n, the hierarchy of the jungle will soon reassert itself, just as it always has. Besides, Nadal is one of those players who seems to have been “on the way out” for a decade or more: a career in perpetual autumn.

There is a famous New York Times profile that describes his explosive, injury-prone style as a “poetic selfimmola­tion, the glorious athlete pushing himself resolutely toward[s] his own undoing”. That was in 2009. Nadal has spent a good part of his adult life reading his own premature obituaries.

If Federer marks time and Djokovic chases it down, then Nadal stretches it. This is as true on the court as off. Great players often have the ability to slow the clock on their signature moments, lending them an effortless­ly epic quality. For Nadal, it is the instant before he winds up that immense forehand, that broad torso recoiling, a moment of perfect stillness that also carries an implicatio­n of irresistib­le power.

For all this, it is Nadal who has also changed the most over time. His serve, particular­ly his second serve, has developed new layers of brutality in the last couple of years. He is more confident at the net than ever.

When you have achieved all he has, how do you remain so open to the possibilit­y that your best years still lie ahead? A form of stubbornne­ss, I suppose: a wilful myopia bordering on masochism. “I learned during all my career to enjoy suffering,” Nadal has said and this is the axiom that sustains his most ardent fans as he waits impatientl­y in his Mallorcan palace, watching time tick slowly away.

The old get older. The young merely mature. The world the Big Three bestrode before the pandemic may not necessaril­y exist after it. Federer will be 39 in August, Nadal 34 next week. Djokovic has just turned 33. After almost two decades of untrammell­ed dominance, a new order feels impossible to envisage; like much else that felt unimaginab­le a few months ago.

And yet. Perhaps a little time away from the daily grind of the tour will work to Nadal’s advantage. Time for niggles to clear up, for aches to heal, for the mind to refresh and for the body to recharge. And then, as if awaking from a deep sleep, he will return: the old fire in his belly, a new trick or two up his sleeve, ready to suffer and conquer all over again. Not a new normal but an old normal, with adaptation­s.

 ?? Photograph: Julian Finney/Getty Images ?? Rafael Nadal’s absence is keenly felt in the week the French Open should have begun.
Photograph: Julian Finney/Getty Images Rafael Nadal’s absence is keenly felt in the week the French Open should have begun.
 ?? Photograph: Ballestero­s/EPA ?? Lionel Messi and Sergio Agüero in training with Argentina in 2014.
Photograph: Ballestero­s/EPA Lionel Messi and Sergio Agüero in training with Argentina in 2014.

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