The Northern Advocate

Too soon to count out the clay king

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Australian Alex de Minaur has missed out on the chance of a lifetime to beat Rafael Nadal on clay in successive tournament­s, blown away by the rejuvenate­d, emotionall­ycharged Spanish great in the Madrid Open.

The Australian No 1, looking a shadow of the player who blitzed Nadal in Barcelona 10 days earlier, seemed tight and a mite distracted in the face of passionate support for the home idol in the Caja Magica on Saturday as he succumbed 7-6 (8-6) 6-3 in the second round.

But for 37-year-old Nadal, cheered by Spanish king Felipe VI and footballin­g royalty Zinedine Zidane, there were moments of old purple perfection as he blasted spectacula­r winners past the fleet Sydneyside­r in a two-hour reminder of why no-one can write him off on the surface he adores.

In just Nadal’s fourth match since his latest three-month injury lay-off, de Minaur was fancied to repeat his Barcelona win, and become the first to knock him out of successive tournament­s since Roger Federer did so in 2017.

But in what’s been billed as his farewell tour, this felt much more like a reawakenin­g as Nadal changed tactics, offering flat-hitting de Minaur plenty of high-looping, top-spinning shots that ensured the uncomforta­ble Aussie couldn’t find any rhythm.

Evidently feeling like the sacrifice in the seething bullring that was the Manolo Santana Stadium, de Minaur chucked in an uncharacte­ristic 33 unforced errors.

Nadal, though, was left beaming after all his recent gloomy pronouncem­ents about the state of his fitness.

Asked if this was a sign he was close to rediscover­ing his best, he just smiled: “No, not yet no, I need time.

“I’m still on an up, super-happy now to be able to be competitiv­e against a great player like Alex for over two hours, it means a lot to me.”

The immediate future? “I dont know, I really believe tennis hasn’t been an issue the last two years, more the physical issues.

“If I’m able to play weeks in a row, I’ll see how far I can go and how competitiv­e I could be. But step by step, let’s see how I recover really.”

The key to victory came in the opening tiebreak when de Minaur saved four set points, only for Nadal to conjure up an amazing, scurrying backhand cross-court winner to earn a fifth set point which he annexed after a 76-minute slugfest.

From there, he earned a quick break in the second set and de Minaur seemed utterly frazzled by the time he served a double fault on match point to gift the win.

It was a bad afternoon for the Australian challenge all round as Max Purcell went down 6-3 6-3 to 25th seed Sebastian Korda, while 32nd seed Jordan Thompson will be kicking himself after serving for the match against Russia’s Pavel Kotov in the final set, only to succumb 5-7 6-4 7-5.

Nadal next faces Argentina’s Pedro Cachin, who defeated Frances Tiafoe 7-6 (7-1) 3-6 6-4.

Top seed Jannik Sinner marched on, brushing aside fellow Italian Lorenzo Sonego 6-0 6-3, while third seed Daniil Medvedev came from a set down to defeat Matteo Arnaldi.

But the surprise of the day came as Stefanos Tsitsipas, looking to make it three straight finals, lost 6-4 6-4 to Brazilian qualifier Thiago Monteiro.

 ?? Photo / AP ?? Rafael Nadal isn’t done yet.
Photo / AP Rafael Nadal isn’t done yet.

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