By Jim McLennan from Essential Tennis Instruction
The following is a two part article. With part two presented first, and part one to follow.
And this intrepid reporter is guilty (as charged) because I had written part one prior to the results in Beijing at the China Open.
At that tournament, Rafael Nadal recaptured the Number One ranking, but along the way was thoroughly dismantled by Novak Djokovic in the finals.
As you will see later (in the original part one – I assessed his game as nearly unbeatable – Novak (read on) had other ideas.
Part Two – In the finals at Beijing Novak outplayed our newly crowned Number One 63 64.
In a victory that Novak described as ,”Very important for my confidence. It’s very important mentally and emotionally for me.” For Novak had lost three times previously this year at Roland Garros, Montreal and the US Open. In this particular match Novak was overwhelming, winning :
- 91% of the points on his first serve
- 77% of the points on his second serve (vs 30% for Rafa)
- Facing no break points
- and breaking Rafa on two of the four break points on Rafa’s serve
So it seems as though there will be more tennis played between these two in the remainder of this season and well into 2014.
Part One (the guilty as charged part)
Rafa captured the 2013 US Open title, dismantling Novak Djokovic. But in addition to the convincing victory, as well as to the addition of his 11th Grand Slam title – somehow it appeared that Rafa had broken Novak’s will.
In a infamous fight between Roberto Duran and Sugar Ray Leonard in 1980 – there came a moment when Duran, for whatever reason, threw in the towel, turned his back on Sugar Ray, and told the referee “No mas.”
Stop. I am not in any way saying Novak quit. But, and this is important – I believe that at this point in men’s tennis, Rafa is simply unbeatable – he is a genuine game changer – and the guys all know it.
Patrick McEnroe has said, “All the players have the new racquets and strings, but Rafa is the only one who can hit it harder and with more spin that all the others.”
Many years ago the same was said of Pete Sampras. At that point, most of the guys could get the ball above 120mph, and they could all get the rpm’s above 2000, but only Pete could do both on the same serve. Said another way, Pete had more racquet head speed than any other on the serve, and now the same can be said of Rafa on his marvelous, consistent, but deadly forehand.
As regards a simple accounting of tennis skills Rafa –
- Concentrates better than all the others
- Competes at a level that exceeds Jimmy Connors – the kid is a fighter
- Has much more margin when his balls cross the net – because of the vicious topspin
- Is totally comfortable playing the net – which is not the case for many of the others
- Can hit the ball very hard and extremely close the line when needed
- Appears to have no holes in his game – anywhere
The stats in the fourth set of this 62 36 64 61 drubbing tell the tale –
- Rafa made 3 unforced errors to Novaks’s 11
- Rafa converted 76% of his first serves to Novak’s 59%
- Rafa won 15 of 19 points on his first serve – Novak won 4 of 10 points on his first serve
- Rafa faced 2 break points but was not broken – Novak faced 4 break points and was broken twice
- Total points won – Rafa 27 to Novak 15. Game over!
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