Roger that: Nadal’s closing in
— wimbledon
But, the 25-year-old Spaniard says he is still ‘very far’ from Federer’s Grand Slam record
Associated Press
wimbledon, england
Having won four of the past five Grand Slam tournaments and 10 in all, Rafael Nadal was asked on the eve of Wimbledon about quickly closing in on Roger Federer’s record of 16.
Nadal cut in to clarify.
“Very close? No. I am very far,” Nadal said Sunday. “Six is a lot.”
Perhaps. Still, the 25-year-old Spaniard is looking more and more like someone who will be able to challenge, if not surpass, whatever Federer’s final tally is. As long as a couple of other guys don’t get in the way, that is.
For years, Federer and Nadal were the men to beat at major tournaments. These days, they’re joined at what is a competitive and compelling top of the game by a pair of 24-year-olds, Novak Djokovic and Andy Murray.
That Big Four filled out the semifinals at the French Open two weeks ago, and most everyone expects them to be the final four standing in a fortnight’s time at Wimbledon, where play begins today with Nadal as the defending champion.
“That’s maybe something that’s a bit different than maybe in the past, where maybe one of the top four guys wouldn’t feel so comfortable on grass,” said Federer, a six-time winner at Wimbledon. “But this year, it seems like all of us are, which is a good thing.”
Nadal quickly earned the sobriquet “King of Clay” for his excellence on that surface, particularly at Roland Garros, where he beat Federer on June 5 for a sixth championship there.
Now Nadal seeks a third title on the grass of the All England Club, where he hasn’t lost to anyone other than Federer since 2005.
“I love to play on grass. I love to play in this fabulous place,” the top-seeded Nadal said. “In the beginning of my career, everybody talked a lot that with my style of game, [it’s] going to be always very difficult to play very well here. But I worked a lot and I put all my best in every practice.”
As the returning men’s champion, Nadal will play the first match on Centre Court on Day 1, against Michael Russell of the United States. That’s an honor that’s often been accorded Federer, but he lost in the quarterfinals a year ago, is seeded third this year, and must wait until Tuesday to get started against Mikhail Kukushkin of Kazakhstan.
The second-seeded Djokovic, whose 43-match winning streak ended with a loss to Federer in Paris, also is scheduled to begin Tuesday, while No. 4 Murray is slated to play Daniel Gimeno-Traver of Spain on Centre Court today.
Nadal has put together a rather remarkable run at Wimbledon of late, going 26-2 since the start of the 2006 tournament. He lost to Federer in the final that year and the following year, then beat Federer 9-7 in the fifth set in fading light in the 2008 title match. After missing the grass-court Grand Slam in 2009 because of tendinitis in his knees, Nadal returned to win it again in 2010.
“I’m not really surprised by his success. He’s one of the greatest athletes ever, not just in tennis. So you find a way to adapt to the surface and the changes. I mean, maybe didn’t take him as long to adapt, because the court surface is slower. Maybe 10, 15 years ago, it would have taken him a bit more time to get used to it,” said Murray, a two-time semifinalist at Wimbledon.
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