Wednesday, June 03, 2015

Nadal falls to rare French Open loss


Novak Djokovic became only the second man to beat Rafael Nadal at the French Open with a straight-sets victory in the quarter-finals in Paris.
The world number one ended the nine-time champion’s reign 7-5 6-3 6-1.
The Serb, now two wins from completing the career Grand Slam of all four major titles, will play Andy Murray or David Ferrer in the semi-finals on Friday.
Nadal, on his 29th birthday, suffered his first defeat in six years and his second in 72 matches at Roland Garros.
His only previous loss came in the 2009 fourth round against Sweden’s Robin Soderling – but this defeat was far less of a shock, reports the BBC.
Djokovic, 28, went into the match as the favourite, on a 26-match winning streak and as a man on a mission, desperate to add the French Open to his Wimbledon, Australian and US Open victories.
The first set lasted a gripping 67 minutes as Djokovic raced into a 4-0 lead after 21 minutes only for Nadal, constantly urging himself on, to haul himself back to 4-4.
Top seed Djokovic pressed hard once again to earn three set points in a 12-minute 10th game, but had to wait until the 12th to make the decisive move.
Nadal missed a routine smash, reminiscent of the overhead Djokovic failed to put away in their epic semi-final two years ago, and eventually succumbed on the sixth break point with a volley into the tram lines.
The Spaniard held on in the early stages of the second set but Djokovic was now giving him far fewer chances as he tightened up his serve, and the pressure told.
Nadal went wide on break point to fall 5-3 behind and Djokovic calmly served out for a two-set lead.
In the end, the crowd on Court Philippe Chatrier that has watched Nadal dominate for a decade was left giving him sympathetic applause as he managed to avoid a third-set drubbing.
The Majorcan finally got on the scoreboard at 4-0 down but by now his second serve was being routinely despatched by the Serb.
Nadal could do nothing to combat the barrage of returns and gave up his crown with a double fault after two hours and 26 minutes.

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