Sunday Times

HISTORY IN THE MAKING

Arch Rivals | Hostilitie­s resume before 15 000 where more records are up for grabs

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THIS is their 42nd clash, so there will be few surprises for the world’s top two players, Rafa Nadal and Novak Djokovic, when they face each other over the net in the French Open final today.

Both are looking to cement their positions among the greats.

Nadal is gunning to be the first man to win five straight Paris titles to take his total to nine.

Djokovic wants to complete his career grand slam by bagging the only major to elude him.

They each have the strokes and the stamina. It will come down to who can control their on-court aggression and handle the pressure better in front of the 15 000 crowd on court Philippe Chatrier.

“He has the pressure to win for the first time. I have the pressure that I want to win and the motivation that I want to win the ninth,” Spaniard Nadal told reporters after demolishin­g Wimbledon champion Andy Murray in the semifinals.

“I’m going to go on court with

Pressure is there. Expectatio­ns are there. They are present when you play at this level

the same motivation as him. I don’t know if the same pressure as him. Probably we are in different situations.”

The Serbian second seed said he was trying not to get carried away by the stress of the occasion, after a wobble in the semis allowed Latvia’s Ernests Gulbis to take a set off him before he regained his near metronomic consistenc­y.

“Of course pressure is there. Expectatio­ns are there. They are always present when you play at this level,” he said.

“It is the final of a grand slam that I never won, of course I’m going to give my best to lift the trophy.”

On paper, Djokovic, 27, may appear to have the upper hand, having won their last four tussles, including on the red dirt in Rome last month, when he dismantled Nadal 4-6 6-3 6-3 to hand the No 1 his third claycourt loss this year.

But they are not playing on paper. They are playing on the Roland Garros clay, Nadal’s spiritual home, where he has an eye-watering 65-1 win-loss record.

Only four of Djokovic’s 19 wins over Nadal have come on clay courts, and he lost to him in the Paris final in 2012.

“I think there is no doubt that he is the favourite to win,” Djokovic said of Nadal, who he will swap places with in the world rankings tomorrow if the 28-year-old Spaniard loses.

“But, okay, I have been playing some good tennis. The win in Rome a few weeks ago against him in the final definitely gives me confidence and hopefully self-belief.”

Nadal seems to have plenty of self-belief too, declaring himself very happy with his “very fast, very powerful” forehand and acknowledg­ing an improved backhand, ever seeking perfection.

“Is true that I lost a few matches, but playing the way I played [against Murray] probably I will not,” he said.

While Djokovic has former

For me the only motivation is Roland Garros. Doesn’t matter five in row, four, or one. Roland Garros is special

world No 1 Boris Becker in his corner, Nadal will have the history of Roland Garros, named after a French aviator, on his side when they vie for the Musketeers’ Cup and the à1 650 000 (R24-million) cheque.

“For me the only motivation is Roland Garros,” he said.

“Doesn’t matter five in a row, four, or one.

“For me, always when I have a chance to win Roland Garros is a special thing.

“The rest of the things are less important to me.” —

 ?? Picture: AFP ?? CONFIDENT: Novak Djokovic aims to topple Nadal to become No 1
Picture: AFP CONFIDENT: Novak Djokovic aims to topple Nadal to become No 1
 ?? Picture: AFP ?? FIRED UP: Rafa Nadal is eyeing fifth French Open title on the trot
Picture: AFP FIRED UP: Rafa Nadal is eyeing fifth French Open title on the trot

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