Rafael Nadal: The best is yet to come

clayqueen

Talk Tennis Guru
Rafael Nadal: The Best Is Yet to Come
By Andrew Prochnow , Analyst Jan 31, 2015

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Apparently it's time to write off Rafael Nadal...again.

Nadal lost this past week to Tomas Berdych during the quarterfinals of the 2015 Australian Open. And now it's time to forget the 17 straight wins Nadal had pounded out over the Czech player.

Yes, it's the most recent match, and that one only, that should carry the most weight in terms of evaluating Nadal's future trajectory.

Forget the fact that Nadal had played a total of four professional tennis matches since Wimbledon last year before entering the 2015 Australian Open.

Forget the fact that Nadal himself proclaimed he wasn't yet back in form after taking time off due to back problems, wrist problems and appendicitis in 2014.

And we might as well forget the fact that Nadal entered the 2015 season owning the still active record for the most consecutive years with at least one Grand Slam title in a season (10).

Certainly, one might arrive at the above conclusions by reading some of the media coverage relating to the Spaniard in the postscript of his quarterfinal exit from Melbourne.

Peter Bodo, for example, suggested as much with his piece for ESPN.com entitled "Berdych beats ticking career clock."

Bodo certainly called Nadal's future into question with the following philosophical gem regarding the two players: "His [Berdych] match against Nadal was a riveting study in the contrast between two men going in opposite directions."

To borrow a phrase from the great player come television announcer John McEnroe: "You cannot be serious!"

Two men going in opposite directions?

We are talking about one of the all-time greats in history versus a player who at this late stage is still aspiring for his first Slam—and the latter is the older of the two!

After infamously shushing the crowd during a post-match celebration over Nadal in 2006, Berdych proceeded to lose 17 straight encounters against the Spaniard—which puts him in a tie for the most consecutive losses against a single player in tennis rivalry history.

And now, with Nadal still playing himself back into shape after a long layoff, Berdych's recent victory was a "riveting study" in the contrast between two players "going in opposite directions"?

A far more meaningful "study" was watching Nadal own Berdych en route to accumulating a good bulk of his 14 majors while the Czech player remained stuck in neutral searching for his first.

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End of study.

A much more plausible conclusion Down Under is that Rafael Nadal simply had an "off" day on the comeback trail, rather than the notion that his stock is suddenly plummeting like Lehman Brothers with questions swirling about his future.

Folks apparently aren't kidding when they lament the over-dramatization of the 24-hour news cycle.

That same media machine almost assuredly produced a similarly-toned article by Chris Chase for USAToday.com entitled "Is this the start of Rafael Nadal's Inevitable Decline?"

Come again?

Yes, Nadal's style of play puts excessive wear and tear on his body.

Yes, Nadal has been nicked up since another early bow-out at Wimbledon last year.

On the other hand, Nadal is still in the midst of that consecutive-years Slam record at the age of 28. He's also the five-time defending champion at the French Open in Paris. And he has won the most Masters 1000 titles in the history of the sport.

If Nadal has shown anything during his incredible career, it's his signature resilience.

What other player has faced so many questions and doubts despite accomplishing amongst the most of any player who's ever stepped on a tennis court?

Wouldn't it be something if Nadal for once was afforded the benefit of the doubt?

My, my, wouldn't that be something!

It's well known that Nadal has been forced to take time off due to injury at times during his career. But it's equally well-known that each and every time it happens, Rafa seems to rebound in fantastic fashion.

In fact, Nadal's return to tennis this season is eerily similar to his return in 2010.

Bouncing back from knee issues in 2009, Nadal made the quarterfinals of the 2010 Australian Open. He then proceeded to reel off three consecutive Slam titles while in the process becoming the first and only player ever to win majors on three different surfaces (clay, grass, hard court) in the same calendar year.

Likewise, after missing the 2013 Australian Open, Nadal tore though the remainder of that season by not only raising the winner's trophy at the French Open but also becoming the first person since Andy Roddick in 2003 to sweep the North American hard court season (Montreal, Cincinnati, New York). The last feat being especially notable given the tendency of many to label Nadal as a one-surface wonder.

Looking at Nadal's current comeback through a more realistic lens suggests that the time was possibly never more ripe for Berdych to steal an elusive victory over the world's No. 3-ranked player.

Nadal's entire game is built on his physical prowess. His movement, defense and resilience represent that signature brand of never-say-die tennis that a healthy Rafa brings to each and every match.

Without full access to these physical gifts, Nadal simply is not the same player. His mental toughness is built on top of his physical game, so if slight fractures appear in the base, the entire structure can crumble.

Glimpses of vintage Nadal were seen Down Under this year. He faced six break points against Kevin Anderson in the first set of the fourth round and saved them all. Nadal then converted his second break-point chance and proceeded to rout the South African.

That's classic Rafa, stingy when facing break points on his own serve, and opportunistic when an opponent presents him with the same chance.

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If anything, what was clear in his match against Berdych was that Nadal is still not 100 percent back in terms of physical conditioning. The Spaniard routinely watched winners whizz by him that in the past would have been returned with interest.

It's true that Nadal played a bad match against Berdych during the quarterfinals. It's also true he doesn't quite look like himself.

The key addendum that must be added to the last assertion is the word "yet."

Nadal stands only three titles behind Roger Federer for the most in Grand Slam history.

In his present state of mind, that gap may seem wider than the distance between Melbourne and Paris.

However, if history repeats itself, Nadal will once again play himself back into shape. And the next Grand Slam of 2015 will be played on what has effectively become Rafa's home court.

If Nadal can follow the same path set during previous comebacks, and there's no good reason to believe he can't, then the man from Mallorca will be raising his 15th major trophy come June.

And moving within two of Federer may have quite the dramatic affect on his motivation and desire to complete the job.

If Nadal does indeed rehabilitate his body enough to reach his goals in Paris this year, then the final chase for Federer's record could be an epic conclusion to what has already been arguably the greatest period in tennis history.

Doubting Nadal's determination and resiliency has never worked in the past.

In fact, a review of Nadal's past clearly illustrates that the opposite stance should be embraced—that the best is yet to come.



Stats courtesy of ATP World Tour

http://bleacherreport.com/articles/2349002-rafael-nadal-the-best-is-yet-to-come
 
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Mike Sams

G.O.A.T.
Nadal has won only 1 non-clay Slam since 2010 and even then he was lucky to win it as he played a mediocre tired Djokovic who was a hair from a 2 sets to 1 lead.
Competition is stronger, younger players coming up, Nadal is much older..almost 30. More injury prone. Will take a tremendous effort for him to compete with the hungry young lions out there. I got him winning RG though. That's his forte.
 

90's Clay

Banned
Well I think we have already seen Rafa's best.. But I fully expect him to win another 2-4 slams anyways.

There really is no reason why he shouldn't. I look at the AO as more of rust than a true HUGE Decline.. He barely had any match play under his belt prior. And still made the QF. Thats a dang good result

If I had to bet:

2 more French Opens
1 More USO

Maybe 1 More AO
 

SpinToWin

Talk Tennis Guru
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Seriously… "The best is yet to come"? Is Nadal gonna suddenly enter peak #2 and win 15 slams or what? :neutral:

His "best" is over.
 

jm1980

Talk Tennis Guru
You know the situation is dire when you have to quote BleacherReport (!!) opinion pieces to back up your favorite player :lol:

The best is behind Nadal. His decline will start now. May win a couple more RGs but probably won't surpass Fed
 
D

Deleted member 77403

Guest
I sincerely hope that we still get some more Rafa magic moments for a little while longer, he has just meant so much to this game, and I think we will. However, the truly best of Nadal is surely behind him, as he approaches 29 years of age before the conclusion of the next slam. He is getting older and his body is breaking down all the time, and with everything he has done, he does look like a tired man out there now...the same as what Federer was in 2010.

The write however is a fanboy, and it is obvious, since it is the Bleacher Report that is the source.
 

Mustard

Bionic Poster
Nadal has won only 1 non-clay Slam since 2010 and even then he was lucky to win it as he played a mediocre tired Djokovic who was a hair from a 2 sets to 1 lead.

Laughable. Mediocre and tired? It's amazing how Nadal won the third set of that final when Djokovic was a break up and when Nadal was later at 4-4 and 0-40 down on serve. Yet you make it sound like Nadal's victory from there was no big deal.
 

Crisstti

Legend
Great article Clayqueen :)

Especially liked his calling out on that ridiculous "journalist":

Bodo certainly called Nadal's future into question with the following philosophical gem regarding the two players: "His [Berdych] match against Nadal was a riveting study in the contrast between two men going in opposite directions."

To borrow a phrase from the great player come television announcer John McEnroe: "You cannot be serious!"

Two men going in opposite directions?

We are talking about one of the all-time greats in history versus a player who at this late stage is still aspiring for his first Slam—and the latter is the older of the two!
 

Crisstti

Legend
Laughable. Mediocre and tired? It's amazing how Nadal won the third set of that final when Djokovic was a break up and when Nadal was later at 4-4 and 0-40 down on serve. Yet you make it sound like Nadal's victory from there was no big deal.

He probably still has nightmares about that set lol
 

Crisstti

Legend
I sincerely hope that we still get some more Rafa magic moments for a little while longer, he has just meant so much to this game, and I think we will. However, the truly best of Nadal is surely behind him, as he approaches 29 years of age before the conclusion of the next slam. He is getting older and his body is breaking down all the time, and with everything he has done, he does look like a tired man out there now...the same as what Federer was in 2010.

The write however is a fanboy, and it is obvious, since it is the Bleacher Report that is the source.

Well, you can see from the article and the comparisons it makes that it just refers to the best for the season, not that the of his career is to come.

That an article is from Bleacher Report doesn't mean it cannot be well written. This one is. The author is no Tignor, but he's better than Bodo for sure.
 

Mustard

Bionic Poster
Before anyone talks about a Grand Slam, you'd think they'd at least wait until somebody wins both the Australian Open and the French Open in the same calendar year first. That hasn't been done on the men's side since Jim Courier in 1992.
 

insideguy

G.O.A.T.
Before anyone talks about a Grand Slam, you'd think they'd at least wait until somebody wins both the Australian Open and the French Open in the same calendar year first. That hasn't been done on the men's side since Jim Courier in 1992.

The Grand Slam at this point in Rafas career would be if he actually played in all four slams in a year.
 

clayqueen

Talk Tennis Guru
I think 'the best is yet to come' doesn't mean of his whole career only since his return to the tour this time. At least that's what I take it to mean.

Serena has had lots of ups and downs, illness and injury and lost to many unlikely people but she's always a threat, so is Nadal.
 

insideguy

G.O.A.T.
I think 'the best is yet to come' doesn't mean of his whole career only since his return to the tour this time. At least that's what I take it to mean.

Serena has had lots of ups and downs, illness and injury and lost to many unlikely people but she's always a threat, so is Nadal.


Well gee clayqueen then if thats your definition of the best is yet to come that aint much cause he has pretty much sucked *** since he has come back to the tour. And I am not even clear when this comeback is. After wimby the fall season? Yea that wasnt much. Now after the fall season? What was that? I mean the bar isnt really high here.
 

jm1980

Talk Tennis Guru

Just some of the highlights:

Roger Federer: Why Gold at Olympics Won't Solve His Rafael Nadal Problem
King of Clay Holds Court in Mexico
Roger Federer Chastises the Same Media Establishment That Built Him Up
Rafael Nadal: Rare Loss on Dirt Should Stoke Motivational Fire
"Struggling" Rafael Nadal Cruises into Final at Rome Masters
Rafael Nadal Should Equal Roger Federer's Slam Mark in 2016

:lol:

And check his tweets too, this man might be more obsessed with Nadal than clayqueen herself :lol:
 
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D

Deleted member 77403

Guest
Oh God it gets better. Fully paid up member of the VB it seems. Thanks ClayQueen this thread is absolute gold!

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Yep, I knew it! He just seemed like a fanboy in that article, and all these tweets prove it.
 
D

Deleted member 77403

Guest
Just some of the highlights:

Roger Federer: Why Gold at Olympics Won't Solve His Rafael Nadal Problem
King of Clay Holds Court in Mexico
Roger Federer Chastises the Same Media Establishment That Built Him Up
Rafael Nadal: Rare Loss on Dirt Should Stoke Motivational Fire
"Struggling" Rafael Nadal Cruises into Final at Rome Masters
Rafael Nadal Should Equal Roger Federer's Slam Mark in 2016

:lol:

And check his tweets too, this man might be more obsessed with Nadal than layqueen herself :lol:

And this is meant to be an unbiased journalist? :confused:
 

tennisfan87

Rookie
My God, are some of you people repulsive :mad: Yeah, yeah, laugh all you want.

We know you can't wait for the moment Rafa might be truly done. The article might be delusional, fanboyish and wishful thinking with the 'best yet to come' part, but frankly, you aren't any better.

So we, Nadal fans, can't show any support for our favorite player, can't hope for a successful comeback and return to previous form, without getting called delusional.

What's wrong with that? Nobody expects him to dominate the tour but he can still be a contender for the biggest titles, especially on clay.

Nobody laughs at you when you still expect Federer to win a slam, return to number 1 (many of you were still hoping for that to happen this year, especially some time after the AO), but we're the delusional ones.

Yeah Ok. If you can't say anything meaningful, intelligent or inoffensive without disrespecting Nadal and his fanbase, then take a hike.
 

gut wax

Hall of Fame
Lots of Members will be hiking then.

Speaking of future tense;

When Fans (such as some on this site) exalt a person as if they were a God, there's going to be an equal, and opposite reaction to said fanaticism.

Unfortunately, that's also past and present tense.
 

Towser83

G.O.A.T.
All this is, is an over reaction to an over reaction. Nadal losing to Berdych does not signal the end of his career, but nor does it mean that he will make a stunning comeback just because if has happened before. the article says he's not the same player without being phyiscally strong, but this will get harder as he gets older. It mentions injuries hamper him but this will get more likely as he gets older. His best is definitely behind him but doesn't mean he can't win more than 17 slams and I feel it's very likely he adds at least one more RG title.

Outside of RG I feel it's a question of how good the other guys are, because he's not gong to be consistantly his best. So will thers decline the same amount as him or stay good enough to take adantage of a gap?. Djokovic, Fed and Murray at 70% vs Nadal at 80% and Nadal can win lots more, but if Djokovic and Murray for instance are 80% and Nadal 70% then on Hc he's going to find it hard.
 
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N

Nathaniel_Near

Guest
OK. But maybe his most historic achievements are yet to come, such as extending his RG record or surpassing 17 Grand Slam titties.
 

marc45

G.O.A.T.
You know the situation is dire when you have to quote BleacherReport (!!) opinion pieces to back up your favorite player :lol:

The best is behind Nadal. His decline will start now. May win a couple more RGs but probably won't surpass Fed

so he's going to decline his way to 16 slams?... we should all be so fortunate
 

clayqueen

Talk Tennis Guru
Well gee clayqueen then if thats your definition of the best is yet to come that aint much cause he has pretty much sucked *** since he has come back to the tour. And I am not even clear when this comeback is. After wimby the fall season? Yea that wasnt much. Now after the fall season? What was that? I mean the bar isnt really high here.

You are deliberately clouding your view of the 2nd half of Nadal's 2014 when he had wrist & back injury plus appendectomy. He didn't play the Nth American h/c season and missed the WTF. His comeback started in Doha.

Let's just wait and see.
 

The_Order

G.O.A.T.
I doubt we'll see him back to his best, but I don't care, I just want him fit and firing for the majors from now on. Leave Masters to Djokovic.
 

clayqueen

Talk Tennis Guru
I think anyone who thinks that Nadal's best years are yet to come is quite delusional.

No one is suggesting that Nadal's best of his career is yet to come, not even Nadal. He has even said he is 2 years older than his last comeback in 2013. The writer was referring to his recovery and comeback after his latest setback with injury and illness.
 

clayqueen

Talk Tennis Guru
Nadal is where Djokovic was this time last year, going out in the QF of the AO. Djokovic did not win a title until Miami and he wasn't coming off injury time out.
 
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