Regina Leader-Post

Make it ocho for Nadal

Clay court master takes French Open

- HOWARD FENDRICH

PARIS — If Rafael Nadal truly was going to be challenged, if his bid for an unpreceden­ted eighth French Open championsh­ip would be slowed even a bit, this might have been the moment.

Leading by a set and a break 70 minutes into Sunday’s final against David Ferrer, another generally indefatiga­ble Spaniard, Nadal faced four break points in one game. The last was a 31-stroke exchange, the match’s longest, capped when Nadal absorbed Ferrer’s strong backhand approach and transforme­d it into a cross-court backhand passing shot.

Ferrer glared at the ball as it flew past and landed in a corner, then smiled ruefully. What else was there to do? Dealing with Nadal’s defence-to-offence on red clay is a thankless task. His rain-soaked 6-3, 6-2, 6-3 victory over Ferrer was Nadal’s record 59th win in 60 matches at the French Open and made him the only man with eight titles at any grand slam tournament.

“I never like to compare years, but it’s true that this year means something very special for me,” Nadal said, alluding to the way he managed to come back from a left knee injury that sidelined him for about seven months.

“When you have a period of time like I had,” he added, “you realize that you don’t know if you will have the chance to be back here with this trophy another time.”

On Saturday, Serena Williams won her 16th grand slam title and her first French Open championsh­ip since 2002, beating familiar foil Maria Sharapova 6-4, 6-4.

The victory completed the No. 1-ranked Williams’s rebound from a shocking loss to 111th-ranked Virginie Razzano in the first round at Roland Garros a year ago. Since that defeat she’s 74-3, including titles at Wimbledon, the U.S. Open, the London Olympics and the season-ending WTA Championsh­ips.

Williams has won a career-best 31 consecutiv­e matches. She improved to 14-2 against Sharapova, including victories in their past 13 meetings, with four of the wins this year.

At 31, Williams became the oldest woman to win a major title since Martina Navratilov­a won at Wimbledon in 1990 at age 33.

As for Nadal, the question is how he does it year after year. He won four French Opens in a row from 2005-08, and another four in a row from 2010-13.

“Rafael was better than me,” said Ferrer, who had won all 18 sets he’d played the past two weeks to reach his first grand slam final at age 31. “He didn’t make mistakes.”

A week past his 27th birthday, Nadal now owns 12 major trophies in all — including two from Wimbledon, one each from the U.S. Open and Australian Open — to eclipse Bjorn Borg and Rod Laver and equal Roy Emerson for the third-most in history. Nadal trails only Roger Federer’s 17 and Pete Sampras’s 14.

“Winning 17 grand slam titles, that’s miles away,” Nadal said with his typical humility. “I’m not even thinking about it.”

This was Nadal’s first major tournament after a surprising second-round loss at Wimbledon last June. Since rejoining the tour in February, he is 43-2 with seven titles and two runner-up finishes. He’s won his past 22 matches.

“For me, it’s incredible,” said Toni Nadal, Rafael’s uncle and coach. “When I think of all that Rafael has done, I don’t understand it.”

 ?? CLIVE BRUNSKILL/GETTY Images ?? Rafael Nadal celebrates his match point against David Ferrer during the men’s singles final
of the French Open on Sunday in Paris.
CLIVE BRUNSKILL/GETTY Images Rafael Nadal celebrates his match point against David Ferrer during the men’s singles final of the French Open on Sunday in Paris.

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