The Citizen (Gauteng)

This is how you can beat Rafa

O’SHANNESSY: SERVE UNDER-ARM

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Nadal a freak of nature on the Roland Garros clay.

London

When a respected tennis analyst suggested recently that an underarm serve could be an effective weapon in halting Rafael Nadal’s annual rampage on clay most just chuckled.

The trouble is that no one seems to have come up with a better plan to throw the Spaniard off-kilter as he eyes a record-extending 11th title at the French Open, which start tomorrow.

The 31-year-old has rarely been a hotter favourite heading into the Roland Garros fortnight.

Apart from Nadal, only Roger Federer, Stan Wawrinka and Novak Djokovic have got their hands on the Coupe des Mousquetai­res since 2005 and Federer will miss this year’s tournament, while the form of Wawrinka and Djokovic is questionab­le.

Nadal claimed his 10th French title last year, sweeping through the fortnight without losing a set, taking his career Roland Garros record to an astonishin­g 79-2.

In Madrid this month he won his 50th consecutiv­e set on clay before Austrian Dominic Thiem finally snapped the year-long sequence, only for Nadal to win the Rome title last weekend.

The truth is when Nadal is fully firing, convention­al claycourt combat against the Mallorcan is an exercise in futility.

Once Nadal plants himself two metres behind the baseline and spins his web of forehands, there is no escape. Which is why Craig O’Shannessy, the ATP’s strategy guru, founder of the Brain Game Tennis and tactical advisor to Djokovic, threw out the idea of an underarm serve.

“Some people lost their mind at the suggestion of it,” O’Shannessy, who devised Dustin Brown’s attacking blitzkrieg that took out Nadal in 2015 at Wimbledon, told Reuters.

“The idea was perhaps just throw in one! It goes under the heading of you need to do things that make him uncomforta­ble, make him think twice, get inside his head.”

There is a solid logic to O’Shannessy’s argument – in that Nadal stands a huge distance behind the baseline when receiving on clay, allowing him time to impart mas- sive amounts of topspin and loop on his returns.

“Rafa backs up so far when he’s receiving serve he’s halfway to Moscow. So an underarm serve? Why not?” O’Shannessy said.

“You need an agent of disruption. Perhaps a slow serve and volley, more drop shots. Do something radical.”

When Thiem beat Nadal in Madrid he used the higher altitude and thinner air to step in and take the ball much earlier than he usually does – rushing Nadal and dictating rallies.

It is a tactic Alexander Zverev also used in Rome where he pushed Nadal to three sets in the final.

While the good news is that Thiem proved Nadal is mortal on clay, the bad news, according to three-times French Open champion and Eurosport pundit Mats Wilander, is that this year’s Nadal is perhaps the best version yet.

“I see no chinks in his armour really,” the Swede said. “He is playing as well as ever. Better technicall­y with his backhand more aggressive. Because of that it frees up his first serve.” – Reuters

 ?? Picture: Getty Images ?? SUGGESTED PLOY. Could an underarm serve against 10-time French Open winner Rafael Nadal be the Spaniard’s nemesis at Roland Garros?
Picture: Getty Images SUGGESTED PLOY. Could an underarm serve against 10-time French Open winner Rafael Nadal be the Spaniard’s nemesis at Roland Garros?

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