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Author Topic: The Truth's Rant And Rave Show: Now In Progress  (Read 79017 times)

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Rafa gets it done in straights. he really needs to take all his matches in straights.


here is the order of play for tomorrow:



http://www.rolandgarros.com/en_FR/scores/schedule/schedule9.html

One down, six to go!

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Rafa gets it done in straights. he really needs to take all his matches in straights.


here is the order of play for tomorrow:



http://www.rolandgarros.com/en_FR/scores/schedule/schedule9.html

One down, six to go!



that is so right. one down and six to go.

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Sock ran over Dimitrov in straights today:



Tennis livescore service provides tennis live scores for 3000+ tennis competitions. ATP, WTA, ITF tennis livescore.
livescore.in

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key matches for tomorrow:


KEY MATCHES - WEDNESDAY, 27 MAY 2015


Singles – Second Round
[2] Roger Federer (SUI) vs. Marcel Granollers (ESP)
 [4] Tomas Berdych (CZE) vs. Radek Stepanek (CZE)
 [5] Kei Nishikori (JPN) vs. Thomaz Bellucci (BRA)
 [8] Stan Wawrinka (SUI) vs. Dusan Lajovic (SRB)
 [12] Gilles Simon (FRA) vs. Martin Klizan (SVK)
 [13] Gael Monfils (FRA) vs. Diego Schwartzman (ARG)
 [14] Jo-Wilfried Tsonga (FRA) vs. Dudi Sela (ISR)
 [19] Roberto Bautista Agut (ESP) vs. Lukas Rosol (CZE)
 [21] Pablo Cuevas (URU) vs. Dominic Thiem (AUT)
 [22] Philipp Kohlschreiber (GER) vs. Pablo Andujar (ESP)
 [24] Ernests Gulbis (LAT) vs. Nicolas Mahut (FRA)
 [28] Fabio Fognini (ITA) vs. Benoit Paire (FRA)
 [32] Fernando Verdasco (ESP) vs. Benjamin Becker (GER)

Doubles – First Round
 [1] Bob Bryan (USA) / Mike Bryan (USA) vs. Raven Klaasen (RSA) / Yen-Hsun Lu (TPE)
 [2] Vasek Pospisil (CAN) / Jack Sock (USA) vs. Victor Estrella Burgos (DOM) / Joao Souza (BRA)
 [5] Jean-Julien Rojer (NED) / Horia Tecau (ROU) vs. Rameez Junaid (AUS) / Adil Shamasdin (CAN)
 [8] Alexander Peya (AUT) / Bruno Soares (BRA) vs. Andreas Seppi (ITA) / Sergiy Stakhovsky (UKR)
 [9] Rohan Bopanna (IND) / Florin Mergea (ROU) vs. Filip Krajinovic (SRB) / Viktor Troicki (SRB)
 [10] Daniel Nestor (CAN) / Leander Paes (IND) vs. James Duckworth (AUS) / Chris Guccione (AUS)
 [11] Jamie Murray (GBR) / John Peers (AUS)  vs. Thomaz Bellucci (BRA) / Joao Sousa (POR)
 [16] Juan Sebastian Cabal (COL) / Robert Farah (COL) vs. Jeremy Chardy (FRA) / Lukasz Kubot (POL)


       
 
 
 

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Sock ran over Dimitrov in straights today:



http://www.livescore.in/tennis/

Wow! Thanks for that. I didn't see the results of that match. I was watching up until Sock won the first set then I had to go pick up my son. Poor Dmitrov, they've hyped him up so much he can't perform. That, and he hasn't settled into who he is instead trying to be a Federer clone. Imitation is never good and whenever I see him play, to me, he tries to play like Federer, which means he isn't playing like Dmitrov. Hopefully he'll learn to walk in his own strengthns and use his gifts in a way that feel comfortable to him.

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key matches for tomorrow:


KEY MATCHES - WEDNESDAY, 27 MAY 2015


Singles – Second Round
[2] Roger Federer (SUI) vs. Marcel Granollers (ESP)
 [4] Tomas Berdych (CZE) vs. Radek Stepanek (CZE)
 [5] Kei Nishikori (JPN) vs. Thomaz Bellucci (BRA)
 [8] Stan Wawrinka (SUI) vs. Dusan Lajovic (SRB)
 [12] Gilles Simon (FRA) vs. Martin Klizan (SVK)
 [13] Gael Monfils (FRA) vs. Diego Schwartzman (ARG)
 [14] Jo-Wilfried Tsonga (FRA) vs. Dudi Sela (ISR)
 [19] Roberto Bautista Agut (ESP) vs. Lukas Rosol (CZE)
 [21] Pablo Cuevas (URU) vs. Dominic Thiem (AUT)
 [22] Philipp Kohlschreiber (GER) vs. Pablo Andujar (ESP)
 [24] Ernests Gulbis (LAT) vs. Nicolas Mahut (FRA)
 [28] Fabio Fognini (ITA) vs. Benoit Paire (FRA)
 [32] Fernando Verdasco (ESP) vs. Benjamin Becker (GER)

Doubles – First Round
 [1] Bob Bryan (USA) / Mike Bryan (USA) vs. Raven Klaasen (RSA) / Yen-Hsun Lu (TPE)
 [2] Vasek Pospisil (CAN) / Jack Sock (USA) vs. Victor Estrella Burgos (DOM) / Joao Souza (BRA)
 [5] Jean-Julien Rojer (NED) / Horia Tecau (ROU) vs. Rameez Junaid (AUS) / Adil Shamasdin (CAN)
 [8] Alexander Peya (AUT) / Bruno Soares (BRA) vs. Andreas Seppi (ITA) / Sergiy Stakhovsky (UKR)
 [9] Rohan Bopanna (IND) / Florin Mergea (ROU) vs. Filip Krajinovic (SRB) / Viktor Troicki (SRB)
 [10] Daniel Nestor (CAN) / Leander Paes (IND) vs. James Duckworth (AUS) / Chris Guccione (AUS)
 [11] Jamie Murray (GBR) / John Peers (AUS)  vs. Thomaz Bellucci (BRA) / Joao Sousa (POR)
 [16] Juan Sebastian Cabal (COL) / Robert Farah (COL) vs. Jeremy Chardy (FRA) / Lukasz Kubot (POL)


       
 
 
 

Some pretty good matches.

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This article has some great graphics detailing Rafa's wins, number of sets, etc, but I can't post pictures on this site.

Rafael Nadal is to clay what Michael Phelps is to water
26 May 2015

ARTICLES: Rafael Nadal: Can French Open king win ‘La Decima’ in Paris? (via BBC) Federer, the winner of 17 Grand Slam titles, but 13 times a loser against Nadal on clay, sums it up like…
Rafael Nadal Fans · rafaelnadalfans.com


Rafael Nadal: Can French Open king win 'La Decima' in Paris?

As a Real Madrid fan, Rafael Nadal knows all about the significance of 'La Decima'.
One year after the team he has been known to build his training sessions around won a 10th European Cup, Nadal himself has the opportunity to become the first man in history to win the same Grand Slam title 10 times.

The Spaniard had just turned 12 when his fellow Mallorcan Carlos Moya won the French Open in 1998.
The triumphs of Andre Agassi, Sergi Bruguera and Gustavo Kuerten also made a deep impression on a boy who had first dreamt of winning Wimbledon.

But for the Spanish people, as Nadal readily admits: "Roland Garros is the most special one - because it's clay."
Up to this year, Nadal - who began his 2015 campaign with a straight-sets win over Frenchman Quentin Halys on Tuesday - had won 66 of the 67 matches he had contested since making his debut in Paris's Bois de Boulogne in 2005.

He may have lost more matches on clay this year than in any of the intervening years - his brittle confidence has been exposed by Novak Djokovic, Andy Murray, Stan Wawrinka and Fabio Fognini (twice) - but Roger Federer said unequivocally at the Italian Open in Rome that Nadal should start as favorite because of the hold he exerts on the Philippe Chatrier court.

"That moment when you go on court and see the people there," Nadal tries to explain in a BBC Sport interview to mark his bid for that 10th title, "is difficult to describe, but very emotional and very positive.

"I know all the things that happened there with me are difficult to repeat."
Debut win - 'amazing' physical performance

Germany's Lars Burgsmuller was Nadal's first victim at Roland Garros, and after a semi-final victory over Federer, Mariano Puerta stood between the 19-year-old and a rookie triumph.

Nadal, wearing a lime green sleeveless top, white pirate pants and matching bandana, eventually overwhelmed the Argentine to win in four sets.

“Playing Rafa you have to be prepared to run like a rabbit for five hours”

When you watch the final again, 10 years on, you cannot fail to notice how Nadal's style has evolved as much as his dress. The archives reveal an elastic Nadal, bouncing from one side of the court to the other, like a cartoon character who doesn't comprehend the meaning of a hopeless cause.

"I think I was running more before," he says, with a laugh, in a BBC Sport interview to mark his assault on a 10th title.
"My physical performance was really amazing at that moment - the way I was able to move and come back from an amazing, tough position."

The three-time French Open champion Mats Wilander also took a look at the footage from 2005.
"I think he was actually more relaxed in those days," he points out.

"He's improved his backhand I think, obviously he's improved his volleys but I'm not sure that the forehand is better today. I think he hits it flatter and harder sometimes but I think if he watched this, he would go back and say 'Wow, what happened to my forehand?'"
Greatest triumphs - 'when you suffer on court'

Nadal's performance in the 2008 final - when he allowed Roger Federer just four games - was simply breathtaking, but not one of Nadal's favorite memories. "The stronger memories that you have are when you win difficult matches, when you suffer on court and there is a real battle," he says.

Recovering from a break of serve down in the final set to beat Djokovic 9-7 in the semi-final of 2013 was "one of the most emotional" victories he has had at Roland Garros. But, when pushed, Nadal chooses two years above all others.

"2006 was a special one because I got a very important injury at the end of the year [a very rare congenital condition in his left foot], and the doctors were not very positive about whether I would be able to be competitive again at the highest level.
"And obviously 2010, after losing in 2009, was very, very special, no?"
The solitary defeat - 'Wow, this is pretty big'

Sweden's Robin Soderling remains the only man ever to have beaten Nadal at Roland Garros.
It happened late on a Sunday afternoon, at the fourth-round stage, and seemed all the more remarkable as Soderling had won just one game when the two met in Rome less than three weeks previously.

"That year had been tough for me," Nadal recalls.
"After winning in Australia, everything was tougher: some personal problems at home [his father told him on the flight back from Melbourne that he and Rafa's mother were likely to separate] and a lot of problems on my knee. Even if I won so much before the French Open that year my knee was not good, and Robin was playing great."

Soderling won 6-2 6-7 6-4 7-6, and has vivid memories of the match and the final point.
"I think he missed a volley - I hit a pretty good backhand back down at his feet, and I think he missed it wide," he recalls accurately.
"After a couple of hours, when I turned on my phone and had all these text messages and was hearing all the reaction from Sweden, I thought to myself 'Wow, this is pretty big'.

"Playing Rafa you have to be prepared to run like a rabbit for five hours, and there are not many players who physically can do that."
Trump cards - 'he'll do anything to beat you'
Other than forcing an opponent to run like a rabbit, Nadal has an array of tricks which can prove even more devastating when mixed with a dash of clay.

How Nadal won his matches
Wilander still sounds awe-struck as he speaks about a practice session he had with Nadal before one of his Roland Garros finals.
"I have never experienced anything like it," he says. "I could not believe the amount of spin - top spin, side spin, inside out, hook spin - I never got used to it."

Federer, the winner of 17 Grand Slam titles, but 13 times a loser against Nadal on clay, sums it up like this:
"Clay just helps his game overall because he's the best mover we've ever seen on clay. Because of his sliding, he saves a lot of metres. I think what always shows up is his mental strength and his physical strength: even if you play great, he can still beat you and that's what makes him the legend he is today."

The world number 13 Feliciano Lopez was struck by Nadal's attitude, mental strength and competitive instinct when they first practised together at a Challenger tournament in Spain.

"He wants to win all the time in any game he plays. He will do anything in order to beat you. We play poker sometimes - he's a great player, aggressive sometimes, but he's a good poker player I have to say."
The biggest sportsman in Spanish history'

The area of the paddock reserved for the McLaren-Honda Formula 1 team during next week's Canadian Grand Prix will have a television screen tuned into the tennis, at Fernando Alonso's request.

The double world champion, who once played alongside Real Madrid goalkeeper Iker Casillas in a charity doubles match against Nadal and an unidentified partner ("Obviously we tried to pass the ball to the other guy all the time," Alonso recalls) will be doing his best to follow his compatriot's fortunes.

"He's an example for all the Spanish people and for all the kids in Spain," Alonso tells BBC Sport.
"Not only for the people on the street but also for us, other sportsmen, when we see him fighting the way he does. He's never giving up, he's always believing in his power - it's very inspirational. In Spain, he's the biggest sportsman probably in history."
Lopez agrees. He believes Nadal will make history at Roland Garros a week on Sunday, but argues his achievements stretch much wider - beyond conventional sporting boundaries.

"I think Rafa went further than being a great tennis player," he says.
"In society in general in Spain everybody loves him as a person. The way he behaves on the court - always fighting till the end - this is what makes the connection with the people possible.
"He is the son that every mum would love to have."
 
 
 
 

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She's going to love it!

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Here's the full story!

Nadal I Asked the ATP For Bernardes Not to Umpire my Matches
http://www.tennisworldusa.org/Rafael-Nadal-I-Asked-the-ATP-For-Bernardes-Not-to-Umpire-my-Matches-articolo24126.html
Rafael Nadal was calm and relaxed when he reached his first post-match press conference in Paris after having beaten French qualifier Quentin Halys. On the other side of the room there are kids climbing the bushes, showing a poster: "There is only one king of clay and it is not Djoko, but Rafa Nadal!". Rafael smiles to the kids and shows his thumb in appreciation.
Speaking of the match Nadal said:
"I think I played well. He was hitting the ball very hard, full power and when it gets in there is nothing you can do. As soon as the speed wasn't to the maximum level I managed to stay in the rallies and I think I did well. He can have a bright future ahead, he has everything you need to play at an high level".
Then the 9-time French Open champion put an end to the "Bernardes Affair" starring himself and chair umpire Carlos Bernardes. There were rumors saying that Bernardes was not going to be allowed to umpire in Nadal's matches, and today in Paris the confirmation arrived directly from Rafael himself.
"Yes, I asked the ATP for Bernardes not to umpire my matches. I have nothing against him as a person and I don't think he is not good at doing his job, is just that for our relationship it is better we take a break and don't see one another on court. When you have problems always with the same umpire it is better to take a break. In Rio de Janeiro he just didn't respect me. He gave me code violations on timing four times, but most importantly at one point I realized I had put my shorts the wrong way around. So I went to him to ask if I could take 20 seconds to change my shorts and put them the right way. He said that I could, but that he would give me a warning for time violation. I don't think that shows respect and thus I asked the ATP not to have him on court for a while. I am not saying he will never umpire my matches anymore, just now we need to have a break. I really like him as a person, don't take me wrong, is just that for now it is better like this".
Next Nadal will play Nicolas Almagro to reach the third round at the French Open.


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This article has some great graphics detailing Rafa's wins, number of sets, etc, but I can't post pictures on this site.

Rafael Nadal is to clay what Michael Phelps is to water
26 May 2015

http://rafaelnadalfans.com/2015/05/26/rafa-roundup-rafael-nadal-is-to-clay-what-michael-phelps-is-to-water/

Rafael Nadal: Can French Open king win 'La Decima' in Paris?

As a Real Madrid fan, Rafael Nadal knows all about the significance of 'La Decima'.
One year after the team he has been known to build his training sessions around won a 10th European Cup, Nadal himself has the opportunity to become the first man in history to win the same Grand Slam title 10 times.

The Spaniard had just turned 12 when his fellow Mallorcan Carlos Moya won the French Open in 1998.
The triumphs of Andre Agassi, Sergi Bruguera and Gustavo Kuerten also made a deep impression on a boy who had first dreamt of winning Wimbledon.

But for the Spanish people, as Nadal readily admits: "Roland Garros is the most special one - because it's clay."
Up to this year, Nadal - who began his 2015 campaign with a straight-sets win over Frenchman Quentin Halys on Tuesday - had won 66 of the 67 matches he had contested since making his debut in Paris's Bois de Boulogne in 2005.

He may have lost more matches on clay this year than in any of the intervening years - his brittle confidence has been exposed by Novak Djokovic, Andy Murray, Stan Wawrinka and Fabio Fognini (twice) - but Roger Federer said unequivocally at the Italian Open in Rome that Nadal should start as favorite because of the hold he exerts on the Philippe Chatrier court.

"That moment when you go on court and see the people there," Nadal tries to explain in a BBC Sport interview to mark his bid for that 10th title, "is difficult to describe, but very emotional and very positive.

"I know all the things that happened there with me are difficult to repeat."
Debut win - 'amazing' physical performance

Germany's Lars Burgsmuller was Nadal's first victim at Roland Garros, and after a semi-final victory over Federer, Mariano Puerta stood between the 19-year-old and a rookie triumph.

Nadal, wearing a lime green sleeveless top, white pirate pants and matching bandana, eventually overwhelmed the Argentine to win in four sets.

“Playing Rafa you have to be prepared to run like a rabbit for five hours”

When you watch the final again, 10 years on, you cannot fail to notice how Nadal's style has evolved as much as his dress. The archives reveal an elastic Nadal, bouncing from one side of the court to the other, like a cartoon character who doesn't comprehend the meaning of a hopeless cause.

"I think I was running more before," he says, with a laugh, in a BBC Sport interview to mark his assault on a 10th title.
"My physical performance was really amazing at that moment - the way I was able to move and come back from an amazing, tough position."

The three-time French Open champion Mats Wilander also took a look at the footage from 2005.
"I think he was actually more relaxed in those days," he points out.

"He's improved his backhand I think, obviously he's improved his volleys but I'm not sure that the forehand is better today. I think he hits it flatter and harder sometimes but I think if he watched this, he would go back and say 'Wow, what happened to my forehand?'"
Greatest triumphs - 'when you suffer on court'

Nadal's performance in the 2008 final - when he allowed Roger Federer just four games - was simply breathtaking, but not one of Nadal's favorite memories. "The stronger memories that you have are when you win difficult matches, when you suffer on court and there is a real battle," he says.

Recovering from a break of serve down in the final set to beat Djokovic 9-7 in the semi-final of 2013 was "one of the most emotional" victories he has had at Roland Garros. But, when pushed, Nadal chooses two years above all others.

"2006 was a special one because I got a very important injury at the end of the year [a very rare congenital condition in his left foot], and the doctors were not very positive about whether I would be able to be competitive again at the highest level.
"And obviously 2010, after losing in 2009, was very, very special, no?"
The solitary defeat - 'Wow, this is pretty big'

Sweden's Robin Soderling remains the only man ever to have beaten Nadal at Roland Garros.
It happened late on a Sunday afternoon, at the fourth-round stage, and seemed all the more remarkable as Soderling had won just one game when the two met in Rome less than three weeks previously.

"That year had been tough for me," Nadal recalls.
"After winning in Australia, everything was tougher: some personal problems at home [his father told him on the flight back from Melbourne that he and Rafa's mother were likely to separate] and a lot of problems on my knee. Even if I won so much before the French Open that year my knee was not good, and Robin was playing great."

Soderling won 6-2 6-7 6-4 7-6, and has vivid memories of the match and the final point.
"I think he missed a volley - I hit a pretty good backhand back down at his feet, and I think he missed it wide," he recalls accurately.
"After a couple of hours, when I turned on my phone and had all these text messages and was hearing all the reaction from Sweden, I thought to myself 'Wow, this is pretty big'.

"Playing Rafa you have to be prepared to run like a rabbit for five hours, and there are not many players who physically can do that."
Trump cards - 'he'll do anything to beat you'
Other than forcing an opponent to run like a rabbit, Nadal has an array of tricks which can prove even more devastating when mixed with a dash of clay.

How Nadal won his matches
Wilander still sounds awe-struck as he speaks about a practice session he had with Nadal before one of his Roland Garros finals.
"I have never experienced anything like it," he says. "I could not believe the amount of spin - top spin, side spin, inside out, hook spin - I never got used to it."

Federer, the winner of 17 Grand Slam titles, but 13 times a loser against Nadal on clay, sums it up like this:
"Clay just helps his game overall because he's the best mover we've ever seen on clay. Because of his sliding, he saves a lot of metres. I think what always shows up is his mental strength and his physical strength: even if you play great, he can still beat you and that's what makes him the legend he is today."

The world number 13 Feliciano Lopez was struck by Nadal's attitude, mental strength and competitive instinct when they first practised together at a Challenger tournament in Spain.

"He wants to win all the time in any game he plays. He will do anything in order to beat you. We play poker sometimes - he's a great player, aggressive sometimes, but he's a good poker player I have to say."
The biggest sportsman in Spanish history'

The area of the paddock reserved for the McLaren-Honda Formula 1 team during next week's Canadian Grand Prix will have a television screen tuned into the tennis, at Fernando Alonso's request.

The double world champion, who once played alongside Real Madrid goalkeeper Iker Casillas in a charity doubles match against Nadal and an unidentified partner ("Obviously we tried to pass the ball to the other guy all the time," Alonso recalls) will be doing his best to follow his compatriot's fortunes.

"He's an example for all the Spanish people and for all the kids in Spain," Alonso tells BBC Sport.
"Not only for the people on the street but also for us, other sportsmen, when we see him fighting the way he does. He's never giving up, he's always believing in his power - it's very inspirational. In Spain, he's the biggest sportsman probably in history."
Lopez agrees. He believes Nadal will make history at Roland Garros a week on Sunday, but argues his achievements stretch much wider - beyond conventional sporting boundaries.

"I think Rafa went further than being a great tennis player," he says.
"In society in general in Spain everybody loves him as a person. The way he behaves on the court - always fighting till the end - this is what makes the connection with the people possible.
"He is the son that every mum would love to have."




wow. what a great read.



thanks for sharing.



but that does not mean that I am happy with him.

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Here's the full story!

Nadal I Asked the ATP For Bernardes Not to Umpire my Matches
http://www.tennisworldusa.org/Rafael-Nadal-I-Asked-the-ATP-For-Bernardes-Not-to-Umpire-my-Matches-articolo24126.html
Rafael Nadal was calm and relaxed when he reached his first post-match press conference in Paris after having beaten French qualifier Quentin Halys. On the other side of the room there are kids climbing the bushes, showing a poster: "There is only one king of clay and it is not Djoko, but Rafa Nadal!". Rafael smiles to the kids and shows his thumb in appreciation.
Speaking of the match Nadal said:
"I think I played well. He was hitting the ball very hard, full power and when it gets in there is nothing you can do. As soon as the speed wasn't to the maximum level I managed to stay in the rallies and I think I did well. He can have a bright future ahead, he has everything you need to play at an high level".
Then the 9-time French Open champion put an end to the "Bernardes Affair" starring himself and chair umpire Carlos Bernardes. There were rumors saying that Bernardes was not going to be allowed to umpire in Nadal's matches, and today in Paris the confirmation arrived directly from Rafael himself.
"Yes, I asked the ATP for Bernardes not to umpire my matches. I have nothing against him as a person and I don't think he is not good at doing his job, is just that for our relationship it is better we take a break and don't see one another on court. When you have problems always with the same umpire it is better to take a break. In Rio de Janeiro he just didn't respect me. He gave me code violations on timing four times, but most importantly at one point I realized I had put my shorts the wrong way around. So I went to him to ask if I could take 20 seconds to change my shorts and put them the right way. He said that I could, but that he would give me a warning for time violation. I don't think that shows respect and thus I asked the ATP not to have him on court for a while. I am not saying he will never umpire my matches anymore, just now we need to have a break. I really like him as a person, don't take me wrong, is just that for now it is better like this".
Next Nadal will play Nicolas Almagro to reach the third round at the French Open.


Bernardes is an idiot. I cant stand him.




Rafa's next match may not be as easy as in the past here. he could lose a set.



it is going to take him at least 4 matches to get going a little bit.



he has to get his backhand more involved. he has to start giving it a chance. he played a guy today that was ranked 296.

he should have hit more backhands and also gone to the net a little bit.

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our Camelot is slowly growing. we have so much here now to have fun with.


I will start adding more free education in the next few days.


I am glad Bobbi is having fun at Camelot. she is a valued Camelot family member.

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This article has some great graphics detailing Rafa's wins, number of sets, etc, but I can't post pictures on this site.

Rafael Nadal is to clay what Michael Phelps is to water
26 May 2015

http://rafaelnadalfans.com/2015/05/26/rafa-roundup-rafael-nadal-is-to-clay-what-michael-phelps-is-to-water/

Rafael Nadal: Can French Open king win 'La Decima' in Paris?

As a Real Madrid fan, Rafael Nadal knows all about the significance of 'La Decima'.
One year after the team he has been known to build his training sessions around won a 10th European Cup, Nadal himself has the opportunity to become the first man in history to win the same Grand Slam title 10 times.

The Spaniard had just turned 12 when his fellow Mallorcan Carlos Moya won the French Open in 1998.
The triumphs of Andre Agassi, Sergi Bruguera and Gustavo Kuerten also made a deep impression on a boy who had first dreamt of winning Wimbledon.

But for the Spanish people, as Nadal readily admits: "Roland Garros is the most special one - because it's clay."
Up to this year, Nadal - who began his 2015 campaign with a straight-sets win over Frenchman Quentin Halys on Tuesday - had won 66 of the 67 matches he had contested since making his debut in Paris's Bois de Boulogne in 2005.

He may have lost more matches on clay this year than in any of the intervening years - his brittle confidence has been exposed by Novak Djokovic, Andy Murray, Stan Wawrinka and Fabio Fognini (twice) - but Roger Federer said unequivocally at the Italian Open in Rome that Nadal should start as favorite because of the hold he exerts on the Philippe Chatrier court.

"That moment when you go on court and see the people there," Nadal tries to explain in a BBC Sport interview to mark his bid for that 10th title, "is difficult to describe, but very emotional and very positive.

"I know all the things that happened there with me are difficult to repeat."
Debut win - 'amazing' physical performance

Germany's Lars Burgsmuller was Nadal's first victim at Roland Garros, and after a semi-final victory over Federer, Mariano Puerta stood between the 19-year-old and a rookie triumph.

Nadal, wearing a lime green sleeveless top, white pirate pants and matching bandana, eventually overwhelmed the Argentine to win in four sets.

“Playing Rafa you have to be prepared to run like a rabbit for five hours”

When you watch the final again, 10 years on, you cannot fail to notice how Nadal's style has evolved as much as his dress. The archives reveal an elastic Nadal, bouncing from one side of the court to the other, like a cartoon character who doesn't comprehend the meaning of a hopeless cause.

"I think I was running more before," he says, with a laugh, in a BBC Sport interview to mark his assault on a 10th title.
"My physical performance was really amazing at that moment - the way I was able to move and come back from an amazing, tough position."

The three-time French Open champion Mats Wilander also took a look at the footage from 2005.
"I think he was actually more relaxed in those days," he points out.

"He's improved his backhand I think, obviously he's improved his volleys but I'm not sure that the forehand is better today. I think he hits it flatter and harder sometimes but I think if he watched this, he would go back and say 'Wow, what happened to my forehand?'"
Greatest triumphs - 'when you suffer on court'

Nadal's performance in the 2008 final - when he allowed Roger Federer just four games - was simply breathtaking, but not one of Nadal's favorite memories. "The stronger memories that you have are when you win difficult matches, when you suffer on court and there is a real battle," he says.

Recovering from a break of serve down in the final set to beat Djokovic 9-7 in the semi-final of 2013 was "one of the most emotional" victories he has had at Roland Garros. But, when pushed, Nadal chooses two years above all others.

"2006 was a special one because I got a very important injury at the end of the year [a very rare congenital condition in his left foot], and the doctors were not very positive about whether I would be able to be competitive again at the highest level.
"And obviously 2010, after losing in 2009, was very, very special, no?"
The solitary defeat - 'Wow, this is pretty big'

Sweden's Robin Soderling remains the only man ever to have beaten Nadal at Roland Garros.
It happened late on a Sunday afternoon, at the fourth-round stage, and seemed all the more remarkable as Soderling had won just one game when the two met in Rome less than three weeks previously.

"That year had been tough for me," Nadal recalls.
"After winning in Australia, everything was tougher: some personal problems at home [his father told him on the flight back from Melbourne that he and Rafa's mother were likely to separate] and a lot of problems on my knee. Even if I won so much before the French Open that year my knee was not good, and Robin was playing great."

Soderling won 6-2 6-7 6-4 7-6, and has vivid memories of the match and the final point.
"I think he missed a volley - I hit a pretty good backhand back down at his feet, and I think he missed it wide," he recalls accurately.
"After a couple of hours, when I turned on my phone and had all these text messages and was hearing all the reaction from Sweden, I thought to myself 'Wow, this is pretty big'.

"Playing Rafa you have to be prepared to run like a rabbit for five hours, and there are not many players who physically can do that."
Trump cards - 'he'll do anything to beat you'
Other than forcing an opponent to run like a rabbit, Nadal has an array of tricks which can prove even more devastating when mixed with a dash of clay.

How Nadal won his matches
Wilander still sounds awe-struck as he speaks about a practice session he had with Nadal before one of his Roland Garros finals.
"I have never experienced anything like it," he says. "I could not believe the amount of spin - top spin, side spin, inside out, hook spin - I never got used to it."

Federer, the winner of 17 Grand Slam titles, but 13 times a loser against Nadal on clay, sums it up like this:
"Clay just helps his game overall because he's the best mover we've ever seen on clay. Because of his sliding, he saves a lot of metres. I think what always shows up is his mental strength and his physical strength: even if you play great, he can still beat you and that's what makes him the legend he is today."

The world number 13 Feliciano Lopez was struck by Nadal's attitude, mental strength and competitive instinct when they first practised together at a Challenger tournament in Spain.

"He wants to win all the time in any game he plays. He will do anything in order to beat you. We play poker sometimes - he's a great player, aggressive sometimes, but he's a good poker player I have to say."
The biggest sportsman in Spanish history'

The area of the paddock reserved for the McLaren-Honda Formula 1 team during next week's Canadian Grand Prix will have a television screen tuned into the tennis, at Fernando Alonso's request.

The double world champion, who once played alongside Real Madrid goalkeeper Iker Casillas in a charity doubles match against Nadal and an unidentified partner ("Obviously we tried to pass the ball to the other guy all the time," Alonso recalls) will be doing his best to follow his compatriot's fortunes.

"He's an example for all the Spanish people and for all the kids in Spain," Alonso tells BBC Sport.
"Not only for the people on the street but also for us, other sportsmen, when we see him fighting the way he does. He's never giving up, he's always believing in his power - it's very inspirational. In Spain, he's the biggest sportsman probably in history."
Lopez agrees. He believes Nadal will make history at Roland Garros a week on Sunday, but argues his achievements stretch much wider - beyond conventional sporting boundaries.

"I think Rafa went further than being a great tennis player," he says.
"In society in general in Spain everybody loves him as a person. The way he behaves on the court - always fighting till the end - this is what makes the connection with the people possible.
"He is the son that every mum would love to have."




wow. what a great read.



thanks for sharing.



but that does not mean that I am happy with him.

It's sounding like nothing short of a 10th trophy will please you. Tsk, tsk, tsk.


Serena and Maria have come to his defense. Serena said, "What he has done is iconic and if he doesn't win it this year, he'll win it next year."

Maria, "It's disrespectful the way the media are discounting his chances."

Paraphrasing both  statements.

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Here's the full story!

Nadal I Asked the ATP For Bernardes Not to Umpire my Matches
http://www.tennisworldusa.org/Rafael-Nadal-I-Asked-the-ATP-For-Bernardes-Not-to-Umpire-my-Matches-articolo24126.html
Rafael Nadal was calm and relaxed when he reached his first post-match press conference in Paris after having beaten French qualifier Quentin Halys. On the other side of the room there are kids climbing the bushes, showing a poster: "There is only one king of clay and it is not Djoko, but Rafa Nadal!". Rafael smiles to the kids and shows his thumb in appreciation.
Speaking of the match Nadal said:
"I think I played well. He was hitting the ball very hard, full power and when it gets in there is nothing you can do. As soon as the speed wasn't to the maximum level I managed to stay in the rallies and I think I did well. He can have a bright future ahead, he has everything you need to play at an high level".
Then the 9-time French Open champion put an end to the "Bernardes Affair" starring himself and chair umpire Carlos Bernardes. There were rumors saying that Bernardes was not going to be allowed to umpire in Nadal's matches, and today in Paris the confirmation arrived directly from Rafael himself.
"Yes, I asked the ATP for Bernardes not to umpire my matches. I have nothing against him as a person and I don't think he is not good at doing his job, is just that for our relationship it is better we take a break and don't see one another on court. When you have problems always with the same umpire it is better to take a break. In Rio de Janeiro he just didn't respect me. He gave me code violations on timing four times, but most importantly at one point I realized I had put my shorts the wrong way around. So I went to him to ask if I could take 20 seconds to change my shorts and put them the right way. He said that I could, but that he would give me a warning for time violation. I don't think that shows respect and thus I asked the ATP not to have him on court for a while. I am not saying he will never umpire my matches anymore, just now we need to have a break. I really like him as a person, don't take me wrong, is just that for now it is better like this".
Next Nadal will play Nicolas Almagro to reach the third round at the French Open.


Bernardes is an idiot. I cant stand him.




Rafa's next match may not be as easy as in the past here. he could lose a set.



it is going to take him at least 4 matches to get going a little bit.



he has to get his backhand more involved. he has to start giving it a chance. he played a guy today that was ranked 296.

he should have hit more backhands and also gone to the net a little bit.

Djokovic had the nerve to say that sometimes the umpires aren't good and they get things wrong, but it's  not fair for Rafa to say that.

Yeah, right. Rafa is the only one on tour that they're timing and giving violations. Rafa had every right to say something considering that Bernades does appear to target him, him and Pascal Maria.

Novak is lettinghis stature in the game go to his head. STHU Novak. Creep.

 

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