Archive for June 24th, 2008

Rafael Nadal Is Great…But Is No Federer

Tuesday, June 24th, 2008

Rafael Nadal

With all the talk these days about how Roger Federer is going downhill and that Rafael Nadal is poised to take over the top spot, I was finally able to stop laughing hard enough to write the other side of the story.

Don’t get me wrong, I love watching Rafael Nadal play and have been a huge fan since he first got on tour.

However, if you look at Rafael’s track record, he’s really a 4 month a year player. From the time Monte Carlo starts to when Wimbledon ends, Nadal is the top player, hands down. But before Monte Carlo and after Wimbledon, Nadal is average and in the last couple of years, virtually a non-factor in tournaments. If he wins before Monte Carlo or after Wimbledon, it’s on clay and to date, he has won only 5 titles on hard courts

A Closer Look - 2005

2005 was Rafael Nadal’s breakthrough year and still, his best year to date.

Before Monte Carlo
Nadal played 8 events, 4 on clay and won 2 of them in Brazil and Mexico. Of 31 matches played, he won 25 of them.

Monte Carlo - Wimbledon
Nadal started tearing up clay, going 24-0 winning in Monte Carlo, Barcelona, Rome and Paris. He lost in the first round in Halle and in the second round at Wimbledon. He finished up at 25-2, a 95.59 winning percentage.

After Wimbledon
2005 remains the only time that Nadal didn’t go into the tank after Wimbledon. He won in Bastad, Stuttgart, Montreal, Beijing and Madrid. He went an astounding 28-2 and won Masters Series titles in Montreal and Madrid.

A Closer Look - 2006

In 2006, Nadal won 5 titles and only 1 on hard courts.

Before Monte Carlo
Nadal played only 4 events and won his 4th hard court title, beating Roger Federer en route to the Dubai crown. Nadal did reach the semifinals of Indian Wells and Marseille but lost easily to Carlos Moya in Miami.

Monte Carlo - Wimbledon
Not surprisingly, Nadal went undefeated on clay, going 24-0. He lost in the quarters in Queen’s and reached his first Wimbledon final, losing to Federer. In total, he went 32-2, an incredible 94.1 winning percentage.

After Wimbledon
Nadal’s post-Wimbledon efforts were, in a word, poor. In 6 events, he went 14-7 (he lost twice in the Masters Cup). He reached only 2 semifinals and no finals. It wouldn’t be until he won in Indian Wells in March 2007 when Rafael would even reach another final, a span of 11 events.

A Closer Look - 2007

Nadal had a better year in 2007, going 71-15 and winning 6 titles including 5 on clay.

Before Monte Carlo
Nadal played 6 events, reaching only 1 final when he won the Indian Wells title. He would end up going 18-5.

Monte Carlo - Wimbledon
In 7 events, Nadal won 4: Monte Carlo, Barcelona, Rome and Paris. Federer beat Nadal in Hamburg, winning the third set 6-0 in what to many was a signal that Federer would win in Paris. He wouldn’t. Nadal again lost in Queen’s in the quarterfinals and again reached the finals at Wimbledon. He would go 34-3

After Wimbledon
After his 5 set loss to Federer in the finals, Nadal went back to clay and won his fifth clay title of the year in Stuttgart. En route to the title, Nadal faced only 1 player in the top 30, No. 29 ranked Juan Monaco. After his Stuttgart win, Nadal would reach only 1 final, in Paris, and 2 semifinals. He again lost easily to Federer in the semifinals of the Masters Cup. From Stuttgart in ‘07 through Miami ‘08, Nadal would not win a title.

A Closer Look - 2008

If you’re noticing a pattern with Nadal, you’re not alone. Prior to Monte Carlo, Nadal would go without a win.  In fact, Rafael Nadal has only won 4 titles prior to Monte Carlo since 2005 and only 2 of those are on hard courts: Indian Wells in 2007 and Dubai in 2006.

Before Monte Carlo
Nadal not only would lose but lose easily. In his 6 losses, he would win an average of 6.6 games a match in those defeats.

In Chennai, he lost to Mikhail Youzhney (ranked #19) 6-1, 6-0; in Melbourne, Jo-Wilfried Tsonga (ranked #38) beat Nadal 6-2, 6-3, 6-2; Andreas Seppi beat Nadal in Rotterdam 3-6, 6-3, 6-4; Andy Roddick beat Nadal in Dubai 7-6 (7-5), 6-2; Novak Djokovic routed Nadal in Indian Wells 6-3, 6-2; Nikolay Davydenko lost only six games to Nadal in Miami, 6-4, 6-2.

Monte Carlo - Queen’s
Of course, as in year’s past, Nadal’s season didn’t really begin until Monte Carlo where he won the title without dropping a set. He dropped only one set en route to the Barcelona title and two sets in Hamburg. The only time he lost on clay was to Ferrero in Rome. He once again won the French Open and did so without dropping a set including the 6-1, 6-3, 6-0 beatdown of Federer in the finals. Nadal followed it up with his lone win on grass in Queen’s where he beat Andy Roddick, Ivo Karlovic and Novak Djokovic en route to the title.

Win / Loss and Titles

Really, Nadal is a clay court player and the best there ever was at that. Federer is no slouch on clay and has not only beaten him (in Hamburg in ‘07) but had the classic 5 setter in Rome in ‘06 where he had two match points against Nadal. In 2008, Federer had leads on Nadal in the finals of Monte Carlo and Hamburg but Nadal still won.

Off the hard courts, it’s a totally different story. Nadal is good on hardcourts but he hasn’t improved in recent years like he has on grass. His season is really two seasons, clay and grass from April to July, then everything else.

Record from January to Monte Carlo, 2005-2008
76 wins - 20 losses, a 79.17 winning percentage.
24 events played, 4 titles and 2 of those came on clay. Of the 20 events he didn’t win, he was the runner-up in 3 of them.

Record from Monte Carlo through Wimbledon, 2005-2008
118 wins - 8 losses, a ridiculous 93.65 winning percentage.
25 events played, 17 titles won and all but one came on clay, the other on grass at Queen’s in ‘08.

Record after Wimbledon, 2005-2007
61 wins - 16 losses, a 79.22 winning percentage.
Of the 20 events played, 6 titles won, 3 on clay, 3 on hard courts and only 1 title, on clay, in the last 2 years.

How does that compare to Federer?

Record from January to Monte Carlo, 2005-2008
91 wins - 8 losses, a 91.9 winnig percentage.
Of the 20 events played, 12 titles won, 11 on hard courts and 1 on clay.

Record from Monte Carlo through Wimbledon, 2005-2008
98 wins - 12 losses, a 89.1 winning percentage.
Of the 20 events played, 8 titles won, 2 on clay and 6 on grass.

Record after Wimbledon, 2005-2007
86 wins - 6 losses, a 93.4 winning percentage.
Of the 18 events played, 13 titles won, all on hard courts.

Can Nadal Catch Federer?

Short answer: No. Nadal is great from April to Early July. Before and after that, he’s incredibly beatable and has not made any progress on hard courts like he has on grass and is in fact, regressing. With only 4 weeks of grass court tennis and the summer and fall on hard or carpet, he needs to stay competitive and healthy or else he will get passed by Novak Djokovic and others in the rankings as they progress on faster courts and Nadal does not.

Nadal plays a very physical game and is incredibly muscular. Should he, *knock on wood*, get injured prior to the clay court season with a muscle tear or stress fracture, he could drop dramtically in the rankings given the vast majority of points he has to defend comes during that time. As he gets older and the more physical he gets during his play, the risk of injury only increases. It’s often said that it’s remarkable how Federer hasn’t had a significant injury to either his back, legs or shoulder and hinder his performance. It’s one of the main reasons why he has been so dominant. Steffi Graf suffered numerous injuries during her career and both Pete Sampras and Andre Agassi had to deal with health problems. Federer has had a great run healthwise and it’s hard to imagine that Nadal will have a similar run.

Is Nadal Really The Wimbledon Favourite?

Not really. Granted he won in Queen’s but that’s not enough to predict Wimbledon success. He certainly had his chances in last year’s final but couldn’t capitalize not because he faltered but because Federer raised his game as he often does on grass.

The beat down in Paris, did it really affect Federer? Considering he went on to win in Halle without dropping serve is remarkable. In his opening match at Wimbledon, Federer never had a break point on his serve. The talk about others such as Soderling and Djokovic challenging him is premature and even Nadal knows that Federer is as dominant on grass as he is on clay.

It was shown in his match against Nishikori, Karlovic and Djokovic that Nadal has vulnerabilites still on grass and that a Wimbledon title is far from a sure thing.

Wimbledon Day 3 - OoP

Tuesday, June 24th, 2008

Centre Court - 1:00 pm Start
Novak Djokovic (SRB)[3] v. Marat Safin (RUS)
Svetlana Kuznetsova (RUS)[4] v. Kateryna Bondarenko (UKR)
Roger Federer (SUI)[1] v. Robin Soderling (SWE)

Court 1 - 1:00 pm Start
Ana Ivanovic (SRB)[1] v. Nathalie Dechy (FRA)
Marcos Baghdatis (CYP)[10] v. Thomas Johansson (SWE)
Igor Andreev (RUS) v. David Ferrer (ESP)[5]

Court 2 - 12:00 noon Start
Elena Baltacha (GBR) v. Jie Zheng (CHN)
Lleyton Hewitt (AUS)[20] v. Albert Montanes (ESP)
Urszula Radwanska (POL) v. Serena Williams (USA)[6]
Edina Gallovits (ROU) v. Anna Chakvetadze (RUS)[8]

Court 3 - 12:00 noon Start
Samantha Stosur (AUS) v. Nicole Vaidisova (CZE)[18]
Juan Carlos Ferrero (ESP)[21] v. Mischa Zverev (GER)
Francesca Schiavone (ITA)[20] v. Anabel Medina Garrigues (ESP)
Tomas Berdych (CZE)[11] v. Victor Hanescu (ROU)

Court 6 - 12.00 noon Start
Monica Niculescu (ROU) v. Agnes Szavay (HUN)[15]
Marc Gicquel (FRA) v. Ilia Bozoljac (SRB)

Court 11 - 12:00 noon Start
Juan Martin Del Potro (ARG) v. Stanislas Wawrinka (SUI)[13]
Marion Bartoli (FRA)[11] v. Tatiana Perebiynis (UKR)
Amelie Mauresmo (FRA)[29] v. Virginia Ruano Pascual (ESP)
Olivier Rochus (BEL) v. Fernando Verdasco (ESP)[22]

Court 14 - 12:00 noon Start
Florent Serra (FRA) v. Andreas Seppi (ITA)[29]
Bethanie Mattek (USA) v. Vera Dushevina (RUS)
Mario Ancic (CRO) v. Philipp Petzschner (GER)
Evgeniya Rodina (RUS) v. Elena Vesnina (RUS)

Court 17 - 12:00 noon Start
Casey Dellacqua (AUS) v. Pauline Parmentier (FRA)
Feliciano Lopez (ESP)[31] v. Roko Karanusic (CRO)
Thomaz Bellucci (BRA) v. Simon Stadler (GER)
Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova (RUS) v. Na Li (CHN)

Court 18 - 12:00 noon Start
Bobby Reynolds (USA) v. Frank Dancevic (CAN)
Simone Bolelli (ITA) v. Fernando Gonzalez (CHI)[15]
Barbora Zahlavova Strycova (CZE) v. Alona Bondarenko (UKR)[28]
Marta Domachowska (POL) v. Agnieszka Radwanska (POL)[14]