At this late date, after all the sets and all the points and the hurdles, only one remains for Rafael Nadal and Novak Djokovic each other. They are where they expected to be -- in the final of the
French Open. Through different paths and contrasting degrees of
difficulty, the main event following their epic 5-hour, 53-minute
Australian Open final has arrived.
So much history-making rests on the performance of each, but Djokovic
and Nadal have already made tennis history just surviving the French
Open draw. No pair of rivals in the history of the Open era, not Borg
and McEnroe, Connors and McEnroe, Sampras and Agassi or even Federer and Nadal has ever played in
four straight finals of a Grand Slam. Djokovic has beaten Nadal at
Wimbledon, the U.S. Open and the Australian Open consecutively. Nadal is
not only trying to win his seventh French Open, but he's attempting to
break that agonizing losing streak as well..
Although the history is obvious -- Nadal is trying to break his tie of
six French Open titles with Borg and Djokovic is chasing Laver to be
first man since Laver in 1969 to hold all four Grand Slam titles at once
-- the future will also be shaped by Sunday's events. A victory for
Djokovic would cement his current status that over five sets, on any
surface, he is the dominant player in the game without peer.
A Nadal victory would return the balance in his favor, a resurgence that
began in the fourth set of the Australian Open, where Nadal saw his own
tennis mortality in the face of Djokovic. For the first time in Nadal's
career, a player stood on the other side of the net that he could not
beat with his current game. From the fourth set forward, despite
ultimately losing the match, Nadal began hitting deeper backhands,
attacking the Djokovic forehand and concentrating on creating a bigger
weapon out of his serve. After losing seven consecutive finals to
Djokovic, Nadal righted himself this year by winning their last two
meetings, both on clay, in the Monte Carlo and Rome Masters finals.
Djokovic destroyed a listless Roger Federer
in the semifinals, yet Federer still referred to Djokovic as an
underdog against Nadal. This, no doubt will fuel the fire that resides
in Djokovic , one that helped him tame Andreas Seppi and Jo-Wlifred Tsonga here.
Nadal's
heat-seeking focus during the fortnight has been evident both on the
court and in the weeks leading up to Roland Garros, where he had been
calibrating his game to play Djokovic. Through total destruction of
excellent top-15-level players, he has arrived at his moment, and
nothing, not the competition or the pressure of history or the fickle
weather will stand in his way.
"What can I think? What can I
think?" Nadal said Saturday about the ominous forecast that threatens to
wipe out the final. "If it rains, it rains, then we play Monday. That
is all."
But perhaps the potential break will give us more time
to think about the personality of today's tennis dynamic, which has been
on display for two weeks. From the French love of Federer to the
doomed, demoralized faces of Nadal's opponents to the terrific struggles
and triumphs of the great Djokovic in his quest for the career Grand
Slam, this tournament has been nothing short of sensational.
Djokovic is the best player in the game today. And that's saying
something considering the giants whose followings are as big as their
championship resumes. Federer is not only the most decorated player of
his time, but he is also the most beloved. During his semifinal loss to
Djokovic, it was clear who the public favored. With each Federer serve,
each wild forehand forced by the wind, the Chatrier crowd groaned and
tried to rebuild Federer with applause, and Djokovic could not help but
notice. Of course, it did no good as Djokovic continued to smother
Federer like a boa constrictor, and as his dominance grew, the crowd
slowly responded to his excellence. It is not an easy balance.
Djokovic
is not Ivan Lendl, who gave off little personality and played with a
driven, cold efficiency that did not connect him to the public,
especially as the successor to Jimmy Connors, John McEnroe and Bjorn
Borg as the game's next great player. McEnroe was not universally
beloved, but played with passion that fans could identify with.
Djokovic
is funny and personable and charismatic, but like Lendl, who once said
to a post match audience that he wished one day the crowd would root for
him, he has made his appeals to the public for a hug. The was most
noticeable after The Shot Djokovic hit against Federer in that
tremendous U.S. Open comeback.
At times on the court, Djokovic
moves in an uncomfortable acknowledgement that he is for now, and
perhaps permanently, not exactly a villain, but certainly not a
sentimental favorite.
It remains to be seen if a Djokovic victory
will shorten the gap between love and admiration from the crowds, but
during the tournament there is no questioning his ability to channel and
focus against the most desperate of odds. It has become part of his
legend.
Meanwhile, Nadal, who has not dropped a set during this tournament seems too close to be stopped now.
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