Posted on
June 07, 2010 by
Rob York

Rafael Nadal won his fifth French Open title in six years.
Rafael Nadal: There was a sense going into this final that the Majorcan Mauler was vulnerable, based on the premise that he faced a player who had demonstrated the ability to beat him and whose game appeared a good matchup with his.
When he denied those four break points in the second game of the second set, retrieving huge forehands that would have won the point against pretty much anyone else, it was clear: Rafael Nadal had been saving his best for the final.
Those earlier matches when he had committed more errors than usual, had not been the usual human vacuum cleaner on defense, and had allowed less patient or less potent opponents to stick around had been by design. Nadal has learned that he can save his knees and still dominate the field here, and he has that extra gear he can find if he really needs it.
Soderling didn’t play his best in the final, but that’s why he is a very, very good player, and the Spaniard is an all-time great.
With this win, Nadal moves past Stefan Edberg and Boris Becker in the Slam count and into a tie with Mats Wilander and John McEnroe (at least as a singles player). Tennis historians may feverishly debate who is the better of that triad, but it may be a moot point soon – Nadal will have two more chances to add to his total this year. Read the rest of this entry →
Tags: French OpenRafael Nadal
Category
French Open, General, Tennis
Posted on
June 06, 2010 by
JA Allen

Juan Martin del Potro wins the 2009 U.S. Open over defending champion Roger Federer.
The road to the top of the game in men’s tennis is not an easy one, just ask Juan Martin del Potro who upped his ranking as high as No. 5 in the world after defeating No. 1 seed Roger Federer during the finals of the U.S. Open in 2009.
Federer was going for his sixth consecutive U.S. Open championship. The Swiss had not lost a match at Flushing Meadows since 2003. It was del Potro’s first win over the world No. 1 in six tries.
You cannot make it to the top of the men’s game without going through Federer. Few have done it. David Nalbandian stood tall defeating the Swiss in 2003 at the U.S. Open during the fourth round after Federer won his first major championship at Wimbledon earlier that summer.
Gustavo Kuerten took Federer down in the third round of the French Open in 2004. Then Marat Safin defeated the Swiss in the semifinals of the Australian Open in 2005, going on to win the Championship.
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Tags: ATPFrench OpenJuan Martin del PotroMen's TennisRafael NadalRoger FedererU.S. Open
Category
French Open, Tennis
Posted on
June 05, 2010 by
Rob York

Rafael Nadal and Robin Soderling will be meeting in the French Open for the second straight year.
In the absence of yet another clash between Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal, the best Roland Garros final we could probably have asked for was this one, as Nadal seeks to overcome the only man to have ever beaten him on French clay.
That man, Robin Soderling, has added to his number of high-profile wins, but on Sunday seeks to become more than just an answer to a trivia question.
Robin Soderling
Last year the big Swede Soderling played the role of Ivan Drago or, for the more realistic, George Foreman, the heavyweight whose sheer puissance overwhelmed all obstacles, including his own lack of variety.
Sure, Nadal wasn’t at the top of his game, but a lot of that had to do with Soderling not allowing him to play his best. The Swedish clubber crushed so many forehands, drove so many two-handed backhands up the line and serve so huge that all the best clay court defender of our day could do was try to hang on. Read the rest of this entry →
Tags: French OpenRafael NadalRobin Soderling
Category
French Open, Tennis
Posted on
May 31, 2010 by
Rob York

Rain could play a role in the outcome of the French Open.
At the U.S. and Australian Opens, rain prompts an immediate stop in play–followed by the employment of the roof Down Under. Any tennis player dumb enough to play on wet asphalt is asking for a turned ankle, or maybe worse.
The grass of Wimbledon isn’t quite as risky in the rain, but you still won’t see players stay on it should the drops start falling; concrete or not, no one enjoys falling on their hind ends, especially when hundreds of thousands of dollars have been spent cultivating an image of them as great athletes.
The clay of Roland Garros is different. Sure, if the rain starts falling in buckets, the players will ask off of it, because no serious competitor likes playing in mud. If the downpour is light, though, play can continue with relatively low risk of the players hurting themselves.
A little rain, though, can make plenty of difference in what kind of conditions the players find on court.
Just ask Andy Murray. The Scotsman is no one’s clay court specialist, but he remains the game’s premier counterpuncher, utilizing speed, touch, and court sense to keep harder hitters off balance. That’s what he did to Rafael Nadal and Marin Cilic in Australia. That’s what he would have liked to have done to Tomas Berdych in their fourth round encounter on Sunday. Read the rest of this entry →
Tags: French OpenRafael Nadal
Category
French Open, Tennis
Posted on
May 30, 2010 by
JA Allen

The Tennis Channel as well as ESPN and NBC offer coverage of the 2010 French Open
In case you have not been paying close attention, the French Open is underway at Stade Roland Garros in Paris. This event, like most tennis majors, is best seen live—which only goes to prove that you must have money to follow tennis as a dedicated and deserving fan.
The predictable patter emanating from broadcast booths follows a familiar pattern, filling the airwaves with online personalities making their typical forecasts and touting the usual analysis replete with the most probable winners. We watch on our tiny screens as the same top-seeded players go through their paces, generally walloping their lower seeded opponents in the early rounds.
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Tags: 2010 French OpenCaroline WozniackiJustine HeninMaria SharapovaMen's TennisRafael NadalRoger Federerserena williamsVenus WilliamsWomen's Tennis
Category
French Open, Tennis
Posted on
May 30, 2010 by
Rob York

Andy Roddick lost in straight sets in the third round of the 2010 French Open.
Andy Roddick entered last year’s French Open having played only one clay court event, and that was on the fast courts of Madrid. Having gotten married during the clay season to Brooklyn Decker, Roddick arrived in Paris relaxed, fresh and without terribly high expectations to disappoint.
He proceeded to have his most successful trip to Roland Garros ever, winning three matches without dropping a set before falling to Gael Monfils in the round of 16. He then parlayed that momentum into a career-reviving Wimbledon run, beating Britain’s own Andy Murray to reach the finals. There, he faced Roger Federer, the main impediment to his Wimbledon dreams, but came as close as anyone not named Rafa to stopping the Great Swiss on Centre Court.
With that precedent, it was no wonder that Roddick chose to play an abbreviated clay court season again, celebrating his wedding anniversary and resting from his successful spring hard court season, where he won his fifth Masters Shield in Miami.
This year, though, his clay court preparation would be even less extensive, as he skipped the no longer essential Monte Carlo, exercised his right to opt out of Rome, then was greeted with illness upon his arrival in Madrid, leaving him with zero matches played on the dirt before Paris.
After his third round exit this week, we may consider it a strong effort that he got that far at all. He certainly had opportunities to leave earlier.
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Tags: 2010 French OpenAndy Roddick
Category
French Open, Tennis