Millennium Post

Nadal bounces back from loss to Alcaraz

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ROME: Once is enough when it comes to beating Rafael Nadal on a clay court.

Throughout his career, Nadal has never lost consecutiv­e matches on his favorite surface and the Spaniard extended that perfect record on Wednesday by beating John Isner 6-3, 6-1 to reach the third round of the Italian Open. Nadal was coming off a loss to 19-year-old Carlos Alcaraz in the Madrid Open quarterfin­als last week. After a first-round bye, he improved to 44-0 in matches on clay following a loss on the surface.

Perhaps more importantl­y, Nadal regained some confidence as he works his way back from a rib stress fracture that kept him out for six weeks before the tournament in Madrid.

While he would clearly love to add to his record total of 10 Italian Open titles, Nadal's bigger objective is regaining his top form in time for the French Open, which starts in less than two weeks. Nadal has won 13 of his 21 Grand Slam titles at Roland Garros. When the match finished, Nadal headed straight to the practice court to hit more balls. He explained that he's a bit in a rush to find his best form as soon as possible. I need to work as much as I can, Nadal said.

The match today was not that demanding physically.

It was essentiall­y decided during one brief stretch.

Nadal struggled on his serve at 3-3 in the first set, missing a forehand into the net then double-faulting to set up break points for Isner. But the American made unforced errors on both of his break-point opportunit­ies and Nadal eventually held.

In the following game, Nadal broke Isner's serve when the 6-foot-10 American missed a comfortabl­e forehand volley into the net. Nadal then held at love to close out the first set and broke Isner's serve in the opening game of the second.

I finished better than I started without a doubt, Nadal said. He had some chances on the returns. I was in his hands in that moment. Lucky that he missed those shots.

Nadal improved to 19-0 against Americans on clay, having been forced to a deciding set only twice both times by Isner, who pushed Nadal to five sets at the 2011 French Open and three sets at the 2015 Monte Carlo Masters.

 ?? PTI ?? Rafael Nadal returns the ball to John Isner during their match at the Italian Open tennis tournament, in Rome, Wednesday
PTI Rafael Nadal returns the ball to John Isner during their match at the Italian Open tennis tournament, in Rome, Wednesday

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