Tennis

Nadal shocked by 'Mr Invisible' again

(China Daily)
Updated: 2010-01-11 09:18
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DOHA: Rafael Nadal, who not so long ago was dominating the men's tour, is still without a title for more than eight months after an astonishing defeat in the final of the Qatar Open on Saturday.

Nadal shocked by 'Mr Invisible' again
Nikolay Davydenko of Russia kisses his wife Irina Davydenko after defeating World number two tennis player Rafael Nadal from Spain during the final match of Qatar ATP Open Tennis tournament after win against in Doha, Qatar, Saturday, Jan. 9, 2010. [Agencies] 

Nadal failed to convert two second set match points in a 0-6, 7-6 (10), 6-4 loss to Nikolay Davydenko - known as 'Mr Invisible' - which will once again raise the question whether he has the confidence to fight his way back to the pinnacle.

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Little more than a week before he begins the defense of his Australian Open title, Nadal also let slip a 3-1 final set lead and retreated into more defensive and containing patterns which contributed significantly to the courageous Davydenko revival.

"Maybe I needed to be a bit more calm," Nadal said about the second match point which got away. "But probably that's because I have not won a tournament for so many months.

"In this tournament I came back to play my best tennis for a long time," claimed Nadal, making the best of his disappointment.

"Anyway I lost today (Saturday). He played unbelievable tennis - he was just better."

For three-quarters of an hour this had looked impossible.

Nadal shocked by 'Mr Invisible' again
World number two tennis player Rafael Nadal from Spain reacts after losing the final match against Nikolay Davydenko of Russia during Qatar ATP Open Tennis tournament in Doha, Qatar, Saturday, Jan. 9, 2010. Davydenko saved two match points Saturday before rallying to upset second-ranked Rafael Nadal 0-6, 7-6 (8), 6-4 in the final of the Qatar Open. [Agencies] 

During that phase the Russian began uncertainly, Nadal imposed a flatter-hitting, earlier-taken, more enterprizing attack which he had been employing previously this week and had romped through seven games without reply.

When Davydenko began to play more as he had against Roger Federer in the semifinals, taking the initiative wherever possible, hitting stridently and if necessary finishing the rally in the forecourt, Nadal fought back aggressively from 3-5 down and looked odds on to close the match out in the tiebreak.

On one of his match points, at 6-5, Davydenko played just too well, but on the second, at 8-7, Nadal earned himself a relatively pressure-free hit on the forehand from inside the baseline - and unaccountably put it into the net.

Once he had also let slip an early break of serve in the final set, Nadal's lack of confidence, borne from injury, a long sequence without a title and doubts about his future, began to reveal itself.

He retreated more often into what he knew best - the style in which he contains his opponent's attacks from several feet behind the baseline, relying on mobility, tenacity and change-of-paced winners from counter-hitting positions.

But on hard courts that can be a risky ploy against so fine a striker of the ball as Davydenko, who has the ability to fashion quick winners from either wing and to apply a finishing volley confidently when required.

He had after all won the past four of their previous meetings on this surface.

By the second half of the final set he was more often dominating the rallies and after two hours and 43 minutes of battling it no longer seemed a surprise when his turn-around was complete.

"I was just fighting. I never thought about winning. I didn't think I could win," said Davydenko, though this seemed more like his professional psychology for taking each point as it came along.

"For every point I was fighting. And at the end it was just amazing."

It made the man who has become known as Mr Invisible for having so low a public profile only the second player to beat Federer and Nadal in the same tournament twice - the other is David Nalbandian of Argentina.

It also raised the question, now that he has his 20th title, including the ATP World Tour Masters in London at the end of the 2009 season, whether he can also take away Nadal's Australian Open title.

"For three sets it's really interesting," Davydenko answered, predictably trying to downplay his chances.

"There it will be five sets. It's different conditions - here it's 18 degrees, cold and there it can be 30 degrees.

"It ought to be the same but when you get there it always feels different. But I have confidence, so we will see."

AFP