Nadal sweats past Tomic, worried about condition at Open

MELBOURNE: Questions remained over Rafa Nadals health after he said he was still feeling the effects of a flu bug during a 6-2 7-5 6-3 victory over local hope Bernard Tomic at the Australian Open on Saturday.

The world number one was given a thorough workout by the 18-year-old Tomic during an absorbing third-round clash as he maintained his bid to become only the third man, and the first since 1969, to hold all four grand slam titles at once.

My body is still not perfect, Nadal told reporters after the two and a half hour tussle under the floodlights on a packed Rod Laver Arena. I am sweating more than usual. I am more tired than usual when Im playing. I dont know whats going on. Im doing all that I can.

Nadal, the champion here in 2009, recovered from 4-0 down in the second set to regain control of the match just when Tomic was threatening an uncomfortable night for the Mallorcan.

I didnt play well tonight, he said. I played short. I have to play closer to the lines. But even if I didnt play my best, for me to win in three sets is a very positive result for me.

Its more important to win matches when you are not playing your best than when you are playing your best. Its more difficult and has more value.

I have to play better if I want to get to the quarter-finals.

TOMIC ONSLAUGHT

Nadal bombed through the first set, but Tomic came out swinging in the second, bursting into a 4-0 lead as the Spaniard suddenly appeared powerless against the youngsters onslaught.

Sweat-soaked red T-shirt clinging to his body, Nadal came roaring back and finally took the second set 7-5 with a fierce serve down the middle.

A break at the start of the third set effectively ended Tomics resistance and Nadal closed out proceedings with a drilled backhand crosscourt that his opponent struck wearily into the tramlines.

Nadal, who next faces Croatias Marin Cilic, can join Don Budge (1938) and Rod Laver (1962 and 1969) as the only men to hold all fo! ur major s simultaneously if he wins his second Australian Open.

Tomic admitted he had been taken to school by the worlds best player and could see little wrong with Nadals fitness.

I thought (the second set) was over at 4-0, he said, shrugging.

Against these guys, especially in the top 10, you cant afford to lose concentration.

Physical-wise hes a machine. He just wears you down. Hes a true champion. The only way to beat him is step up and hit the ball hard, go for your shots.

If you rally with him a lot, hes going to drain you out. Hes too fast, too quick.


Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Mubarak pledge to step down dismissed as too slow

Hafeez, Afridi and Akmal highlight in crushing win

Gagged Al Jazeera a powerful counter to Mideast regimes