Sunday, 25 June 2017

Resurgence of the King of Clay

Let me confess I'm a great fan of Swiss tennis star Roger Federer, and having written about him once, would have loved to write about him 10 more times. But the sweeping manner in which Rafael Nadal won the Men's Single title clash at the French Open on, making a name for himself in the history books of the game, was way too tempting for any sports enthusiast to ignore.

On Sunday, June 11th 2017, with his clay-court prowess as unassailable as ever, the 31-year-old Spaniard coasted to a record 10th French Open title, demolishing Stan Wawrinka in a brutally one-sided final which also earned him a 15th Grand Slam crown. Nadal triumphed 6-2, 6-3, 6-1 to become the first man in history to win the same major 10 times in the Open era, which began in 1968.


Along with improving to 10-0 in finals at Roland Garros, Nadal increased his career haul to 15 Grand Slam trophies, breaking a tie with Pete Sampras for second place in the history of men’s tennis, behind only rival Roger Federer’s 18.
It marked a stirring return to the top for Nadal in his favorite event and on his favorite surface: Over his career, he is now 79-2 at the French Open and 102-2 in all best-of-five-set matches on clay.
Why winning a French Open is Hardest

Doing a 'La Decima' (the 10th in English) at the Garros isn't a cake walk by any stretch of the imagination. It's a great achievement - one that seems rare to be equaled or surpassed for generations to come. There are solid reasons that make achieving 'La Decima' at the French Open a superlative feat. 

The slow clay surface, the windy open conditions inside the stadium and the disruptions due to weather - the French Open is the only major tournament without a retractable roof on its main court - all make it a devil of a tournament to string together seven straight wins.

Even former legends like Arthur Ashe, Boris Becker, Jimmy Connors, Stefan Edberg, John Newcombe, and Pete Sampras were unsuccessful in mastering the tiresome clay surface. All of them missed their career Grand Slam only because they were never able to conquer Garros. 

Why Rafa is The Best

This game is demanding and challenging because it is a tough physical sport in which injuries are a part and parcel. Nadal's problems with his knees and foot have been well documented but his ability to disregard his excruciating pain and win 10 French Open titles in a span of 12 years is exceptional.

In 2003  a 17-year-old Nadal was forced to withdraw from what should have been his first Roland Garros win, due to a wrist injury. But the Spaniard has effectively worked on his problematic niggles that have forced him to stay away from major tennis tournaments so far.

Here is a 31-year-old who has earned himself a name with a 'La Decima' at the French, proving without a doubt, and against all odds, that he is several cuts above one-hit wonders at the Roland Garros. The fact that Nadal has won other five Grand Slams on grass and hard courts only substantiates his prowess and claim to fame in the history of tennis.

Nadal's influence and superiority over Federer grew with every meeting of the pair during three compelling finals between 2006 and 2008. Watching the usually stoic Federer kick the red dirt away in frustration and despair was evidence enough of Nadal's hold over his great rival.
Earlier this year, the Swiss had even admitted that Nadal's authority on clay gave him the edge in other tournaments. He said, "Rafa has presented me with the biggest challenge in the game."

Rafael Nadal admits he doubted he’d ever win another Grand Slam title after a three-year drought at the majors and an ongoing battle with injuries and poor form. His last Grand Slam title before this year’s Roland Garros came in Paris in 2014 and he admitted that there were doubts over whether or not he’d recover his former powers. “I have doubts every day but that’s good as it makes me work hard with more intensity,” he said.
After winning his ninth Roland Garros and 14th major in 2014, Nadal’s best performance at the Slams was two quarter-final spots. His world ranking slipped as low as 10 in 2015 and his 2016 French Open was ended prematurely after the second round by a wrist injury. But he finished runner-up at the Australian Open in January, losing in five sets to Federer and he was back in business.
He dominated the clay court season with titles in Monte Carlo, Barcelona and Madrid. He lost just one match on clay all year while his win on Sunday took his Paris record to a staggering 79 wins and just two losses. Against world number three Wawrinka, his record is now 16 wins and three losses. On clay, it’s 7-1.
Nadal went through the tournament without dropping a set for the third time in his French Open career. He lost just 35 games in total, next only to Bjorn Borg’s record of 32 in the Swede’s 1978 title-winning season, the second fewest by any man on the way to any title at a Grand Slam tournament in the Open era with all matches being best-of-five-sets.
“To win 10 Roland Garros titles is magical,” added Nadal. “I had tough times last year so it’s great to have big success again.”
Despite his dominance at the French Open, Nadal said he never took victory for granted. He was aware of being within touching distance of the title in Australia in January when he was a break up in the final set only to lose to Federer.
“At 4-1 in the third set I knew I was close. At 5-1, I thought probably I am going to win this. But I have come close before -- in Australia this year and in 2012 in Australia (when he lost an epic final to Novak Djokovic). So my mentality was that I cannot give Stan the chance to get back into the match. But I knew that I had been playing too good in the tournament to play a bad final.”
Wawrinka is no slouch; he owns three major titles, including one from Roland Garros, and had never lost a Grand Slam final. But a five-set semifinal win over No. 1-ranked Andy Murray must have taken something out of the 32-year-old from Switzerland, the oldest French Open finalist since 1973. His shots didn’t have their usual verve, his legs their usual spring. After one point, Wawrinka bent over, leaning one arm on his racket and resting the other on a knee. Nadal has that way of wearing down opponents. On this day, he was nearly perfect. He won all 12 service games, saving the lone break point he faced, and made a mere 12 unforced errors.
When it ended, Nadal dropped to his back on the clay, then rose and briefly pulled his blue shirt over his face. He was again the champion, again unbeatable at the French Open.
As the Spaniard pummeled Wawrinka into submission on Sunday, one was reminded of another campaign where he let little go. The 35 games Nadal lost in Paris over the last fortnight is a record. The previous best was 41, during the 2008 French Open.
In those seven matches he did not even play a tiebreaker, let alone dropping a set. That run to the title saw some incredible results — Fernando Verdasco was thumped 6-1, 6-0, 6-2 in the fourth round, followed by a 6-1, 6-1, 6-1 thrashing of another compatriot Nicolas Almagro. But it was his display in the final which stands out in memory. Nadal’s evisceration of his greatest rival, Roger Federer, took 108 minutes as the Majorcan won his fourth Slam title in Paris. The news of the massacre was relayed by the score line as 6-1, 6-3, 6-0.
It was the kind of result which stays with you. You do not just watch one of the greatest players of all-time take a mere four games in three sets, without the gory details seared in your memory. Perhaps, the one-sided nature of that win made the ‘contest’ forgettable for some. But Nadal’s ruthless performance in the Slam final would have had to look hard to find its equal. Much like it did on Sunday.
When Nadal was undergoing his rough patch that lasted for the most of 2015 and ’16, his longest ally & uncle Toni Nadal identified three areas where his nephew had to improve - strengthen the serve, return the forehand to its former glory and find that competitive hunger again.
This season, Nadal has ticked each of those boxes. The technical work done by him has reaped wonders; his serve has particularly been a revelation thank to the insights provided by new coach Carlos Moya. But it also needs to be stressed that we have once again found a Nadal who cannot make do with what he has. He keeps pushing for more and when it seems it is beyond his grasp, he responds with his own take on a miracle. That reeling forehand on Sunday summed up his refuelled spirit.
Nadal took a stoic view of his defeat in the Australian Open final. But as he said back then, if he took his good form into France, “good things can happen.” And they did. The arrival of the 15th Grand Slam title has cemented the path of Nadal’s rejuvenation which began in Australia. But is rejuvenation the right word? Literally, it means to make someone young again. Nadal, in tennis terms, cannot go back to the works of his youth. But his game is relevant, it succeeds. So he can look to the future. There are plans to be made and thought about.
Conclusion

The game of tennis is as much mental as it is physical. Some would argue the former takes precedence. Other champions would not have been able to keep their head above water with the challenge set before them year after year - but not Nadal.

Nadal is going to be here for a while.

Thursday, 1 June 2017

Barcelona's magical UCL comeback vs. PSG will never, ever be forgotten



Something magical had just happened, something utterly implausible. Football, bloody hell?
How inadequate those two words sound now. All the expletives on Earth would struggle to do justice to this. Barcelona went where they have been every year for 10 years now, into the quarter-finals of the Champions League, but they got there in a way they never have; a way that no one ever has. Not just one comeback, but two. Dead, revived, dead, revived. Somehow, they are still standing.

There is perhaps only one club in world soccer that could stare at a 4-0 deficit for three weeks and eventually decide that it was no big deal. Barcelona manager Luis Enrique said, 24 hours before his side was due to kick off against Paris Saint-Germain, “If they scored four, we can score six,” fully aware that Barça would need to win by at least five to stay in the Champions League.
That’s the kind of certainty that winning the tournament four times in a decade will buy you in these parts: the conviction that if any team on the planet can produce history in a pinch, it’s Barça.  No one believed him and he probably didn’t even believe himself, but it happened. This was absurd, astonishing and agonising too. 
On the night of March 9th, the Catalan club pulled off the most dramatic turnaround the Champions League has ever seen, scoring three times in the final seven minutes to beat PSG 6-1 and advance to the quarterfinals.
I’ve never experienced anything like that.” Barcelona defender Samuel Umtiti said.
Barcelona scored three goals in an hour to give them hope that they could produce a miracle to overturn the massacre they suffered in Paris on Valentine’s Day – but that hope was torn from them.

As Barcelona went 3-0 up early in the second half, the comeback appeared to derail when PSG’s Edinson Cavani snatched a goal back. Except instead of calming things down, it only turned Camp Nou into the craziest soccer venue anywhere in the world on Wednesday night.
The home side needed three more goals to avoid its earliest Champions League exit in a decade. PSG needed only to avoid an epic choke. Up stepped Neymar, Barcelona’s Brazilian winger, with the finest seven minutes of his career.
He scored in the 88th minute with a violently swerving free kick. He scored again in the 91st from the penalty spot—even if Luis Suarez appeared to draw the foul with a dive. Finally, in the chaos of 90,000 fans, he laid on the assist off the free kick for Sergi Roberto’s decisive goal.
This time it was not hope: it was a reality. Ridiculous, but real. Six-one on the night, 6-5 on aggregate. “So many things can happen in 95 minutes.” Luis Enrique had said beforehand, and so many things did; this was a game that will be picked over for days and an occasion that will be relived for years.

Minute-by-minute:
  • 3: Luis Suarez goal, Barcelona 1-0 PSG (1-4)
  • 40': Layvin Kurzawa own-goal, Barcelona 2-0 PSG (2-4)
  • 50': Lionel Messi penalty, Barcelona 3-0 PSG (3-4)
  • 62': Edinson Cavani goal, Barcelona 3-1 PSG (3-5)
  • 88': Neymar free-kick, Barcelona 4-1 PSG (4-5)
  • 90'+1: Neymar penalty, Barcelona 5-1 PSG (5-5)
  • 90'+5: Sergi Roberto goal, Barcelona 6-1 PSG (6-5)

Barcelona manager Luis Enrique: "It is a difficult night to explain with words. It was a horror movie, not a drama, with a Camp Nou that I have seen very few times as a player or coach. What defines this victory is the faith that the players and fans had."

Luis Enrique had called the comeback. He’d even called the goals. But he never could have called the ending.
Barcelona is capable of doing that,” PSG manager Unai Emery said. “It was all or nothing for them in the final minutes.”
Brains. Belief. Guts.
This Barça era, which now really stretches from 2005 until the present day, has more often shown genius, strategy, creativity, technique as trademarks. This was different.
However, there's no escaping the fact that on a night when they did something to stun the world, something that had never been done before, this group of players won not via a display of their stunning, plus-ultra football. No, this was guts, strength, unity, perseverance, a couple of dollops of luck and a smattering of brilliant moments.
Neymar's free kick to make it 4-1 - a dazzling, elite execution - was one.
This was worth remembering because this was pure magic.
Magic from start to finish.