The Herald (South Africa)

NADAL ANTICIPATE­S TOUGH RIDE AT WIMBLEDON

Tennis great braces for bitterswee­t symphony on grass after top French Open run

-

RAFAEL Nadal will resume his bitterswee­t relationsh­ip with Wimbledon buoyed by his record-breaking French Open run, but wary of the traps which have ensnared him at the All England Club. The 31-year-old Spaniard routed Stan Wawrinka at Roland Garros 6-2 6-3 6-1 to become the first man in history to win the same major 10 times.

That took him to 15 grand slam titles, one ahead of Pete Sampras and just three behind the 18 of old rival Roger Federer.

Next up on the slam list in three weeks’ time is Wimbledon, where Nadal was champion in 2008 and 2010 and runner-up in 2006, 2007 and 2011.

However, his last four visits have all ended with defeats to opponents outside the top 100.

Injury forced him to skip Wimbledon in 2009 and last year, while the years 2012-2015 saw him lose to Lukas Rosol (world ranked 100), Steve Darcis (135), Nick Kyrgios (144) and Dustin Brown (102).

In that spell, a fourth round run in 2014 was his best effort.

Nadal said that if he suffered a new problem with his knees on the Wimbledon grass, where the lower bounce of the ball piles more pressure on the legs and joints, then his visit to London may again be short-lived.

“I love grass, everybody knows, and it’s a surface that I really enjoyed a lot playing on,” Nadal said.

“So I hope that my knees hold well. If I have pain in the knees, then I know from experience that it’s almost impossible.

“I need to feel strong and have low, powerful legs to play well in Wimbledon.

“If I don’t feel that, then probably my chances are not there, but if I am healthy and I am able to have the right preparatio­n and feel healthy during Wimbledon, then probably I have my chances to play well.”

Nadal’s resurgence is one of the tennis storylines of this year, along with the similar rejuvenati­on of Federer, who defeated him in the Australian Open final in January.

Before his title triumph on Sunday, his most recent grand slam title came in Paris in 2014 and he admitted that there were doubts over whether or not he would recover his former powers.

“I have doubts every day, but that’s good as it makes me work hard and with more intensity,” Nadal said.

“I have doubts today, I had doubts in the last three years, I will have doubts in a few days.

“Life is never clear. If you have no doubts, then you are very arrogant. I am not an arrogant person.”

After winning his ninth Roland Garros and 14th major in 2014, Nadal’s best performanc­e at the slams was two quarterfin­al spots.

He dominated the clay court season this year with titles in Monte Carlo, Barcelona and Madrid.

He lost just one match on clay, while his win on Sunday took his Paris record to 79 wins and just two losses. – AFP

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa