Oman Daily Observer

Nadal and Djokovic fire shots ahead of final

-

MELBOURNE — All the top three's charitable talk of new challenger­s ready to end their Grand Slam hegemony at the Australian Open has come to nothing and the top two seeds Novak Djokovic and Rafa Nadal will contest their third consecutiv­e major final today.

The rivalry between Nadal and Serb Djokovic appears set to challenge that of the Spaniard's long double-act with former world No 1 Roger Federer.

But where Nadal and Swiss Federer's match-ups inspired mutual admiration, the Spaniard's relationsh­ip with Djokovic, the man who poached his top ranking last year, is far more complex and the barbs have been flying from both camps in the lead-up.

Defending champion Djokovic, dragged into a near five-hour slog with fourth seed Andy Murray on Friday, has a day's less rest to recover than Nadal, and was thus more happy to talk of their recent head-to-head record.

"I know that I maybe have a mental edge because I've won six finals the five or six times we played in 2011 and I've had lots of success against him," said the 24-year-old Djokovic who holds a losing 16-13 record to Nadal, but has beaten him the last six times they have played.

The losses, all in finals, in- cluded last year's Wimbledon and US Open crowns.

"On the other hand, it's a new year. It's a new challenge," added Djokovic.

"It's a different situation. As I said, he has maybe a day advantage over me for recovery and for getting ready for the finals."

While pushed, Nadal finished his four-set semifinal against third seed Federer on Thursday full of running and brimful of confidence, having inflicted an eighth defeat of the Swiss in their recordequa­lling 10th Grand Slam encounter.

That allowed the 25-yearold the luxury of watching Djokovic on television as the Serb closed out the match against Murray with spare fuel in the tank, despite having appeared a panting, sweating wreck halfway through.

Djokovic, who also appeared to struggle before blasting fifth seeded Spaniard David Ferrer in straight sets in their quarterfin­al, blamed an allergy for giving him a blocked nose and breathing difficulti­es.

A skeptical Nadal, looking relaxed and assured in a white T-shirt, suggested it was mere naked gamesmansh­ip.

"It's funny, no? I saw the match yesterday on the TV show on the channel seven when he was in the fifth set moving fantastica­lly well, and they show images from two hours fifty (minutes) before and seems like he was destroyed," the 10-time Grand Slam champion said on Saturday.

"Two hours fifty later he was in perfect condition. So it is difficult to imagine that he has these problems. I don't know."

‘NOT CRAZY UNFAIR’

Nadal also returned serve at the suggestion that his extra day's rest was unfair on Djokovic, given the Spaniard had recovered from a similar position to upset Roger Federer for the 2009 title.

Then, Nadal had played a five-hour, 14-minute semifinal over compatriot Fernando Verdasco, the longest match on record at Melbourne Park, before beating Federer in a five-set classic for his first title on the blue hardcourt of Rod Laver Arena.

"I had only one day and Federer had two, no?" he said. "I was recovered for the final, so I think you can say it's unfair, yes, but not crazy unfair.

"Having one day off, I believe you are not in big trouble."

While fitness may ultimately decide who wins the tournament, a lack of it is unlikely to concern either Nadal or four-times Grand Slam champion Djokovic, bidding for his third title at Melbourne Park. — Reuters

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Oman