The impossible job: Beating Rafael Nadal at the French Open
22nd May 2024
Nadal will turn 38 on Monday in what could be his final Roland Garros tournament.
- Nadal has racked up 14 titles, winning 112 matches and losing just three at Roland Garros.
- Two of those defeats came against Novak Djokovic - in the last-eight in 2015 and semi-finals in 2021.
- Sweden's Robin Soderling had been the first to pierce the Nadal armour in 2009. Nadal avenged that last-16 loss 12 months later in the final.
When a weary David Ferrer managed to win just five games in
his French Open semi-final loss to Rafael Nadal in 2012, he was in no doubt
over the enormity of the challenge.
"Winning a match against Rafa at Roland Garros is
almost impossible," admitted a bamboozled Ferrer as he trudged off Court
Philippe Chatrier.
It would have been no consolation to the gritty Ferrer that
at least he won one more game than Roger Federer managed in the 2008 final
against Nadal.
On the crushed red brick of Roland Garros, hardly anyone has
laid a glove on Nadal.
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Since his swashbuckling title-winning debut in the French
capital in 2005, he has racked up 14 titles, winning 112 matches and losing
just three.
Two of those defeats came against Novak Djokovic -- in the
last-eight in 2015 and semi-finals in 2021.
Sweden's Robin Soderling had been the first to pierce the
Nadal armour in 2009. Nadal avenged that last-16 loss 12 months later in the
final.
The only other time Nadal was thwarted in Paris was 2016
when a wrist injury forced a withdrawal after the second round.
In 2005, when he won the French Open at his first attempt,
he was just two days past his 19th birthday.
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He will turn 38 a week on Monday although the legacy of
recent injury may yet shatter his dream of a farewell performance in the French
capital.
When Nadal captured his record-extending 14th French Open in
2022, he was the oldest champion at 36.
It was a feat achieved despite daily painkilling injections
to numb crippling pain in his foot.
Nadal made his Grand Slam debut at Wimbledon as a raw
17-year-old in 2003, but it was his maiden appearance in Paris that had fans
drooling.
His 6-7 (6/8), 6-3, 6-1, 7-5 win in the final against
unheralded Mariano Puerta of Argentina made him the first man since Mats
Wilander 23 years earlier to triumph in the French capital at the first
attempt.
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Nadal won 11 titles in 2005, eight of them on clay including
the prestigious Masters in Monte Carlo and Rome.
Entering Paris, he was on a 17-match win streak and was
drawn to face Germany's Lars Burgsmuller in the first round.
"I remember that I was a little sad about the
draw," Burgsmuller, ranked 96 at the time, told USA Today in 2015.
"Everyone was talking about him. Everyone knew that he
would be very, very good."
Nadal would go on to claim the French Open title in each of
the next three years, beating Federer in the final on all three occasions.
In the 2008 championship match, Nadal allowed his great
Swiss rival just four games.
That year, he didn't drop a set. Compatriots Fernando
Verdasco and Nicolas Almagro, both top 25 players, were allowed just three
games apiece in their last 16 and quarter-final eviscerations.
In 2017 and 2020, Nadal again swept to the title without
dropping a set.
Incredibly, in his 115 matches at Roland Garros, Nadal has
been pushed to five sets on only three occasions. He won all three.
"With Rafa on clay in best of five, it's like a
war," said Nadal's coach Carlos Moya.
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John McEnroe, who fought legendary battles with six-time
Roland Garros champion Bjorn Borg, was able to compare eras.
"I know when Borg played in my day he was like the
human backboard," said McEnroe.
"He was faster than everyone, fitter than everyone, and
you couldn't get a ball by the guy.
"I saw guys get exhausted in the first set, like the best clay court players in the world. It's the same thing when you play Nadal. This guy, he comes to play every match. This is a guy that just doesn't give it away."
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