Doctor MJ wrote:
-Nadal's game very clearly plays differently against different opponents. The high topspin works well against normal size people but against someone like Del Potro it just goes into his wheelhouse. The hits Del Potro was making against Nadal in that 2009 match were just vicious hits and I don't think anyone could stop, and they were possible partly because of Nadal's stroke.
(Yes, Del Potro likes Nadal's trajectory, but the head-to-head doesn't indicate he takes advantage a whole lot. The big difference in the 2009 US Open sf between Nadal and Del Potro, was that Nadal served at 105mph on 1st serves [torn stomach muscles do hurt, not just an excuse]. He served at that pace throughout the tournament, and that is 10-15mph slower than his 2010 and 2011 US Opens.
Doctor MJ wrote:lol, yeah didn't Djokovic break Nadal like 11 times? You don't do that with stamina.
Yes, Djokovic broke Nadal 11 times, and Nadal broke Djokovic 6 times. I don't recall a grand slam final with 17 breaks before, incredible. And in last year's US Open final, Nadal had 26 break points on Djokovic's serve. It seems to be the way of their match-up. The breaks are a result of stamina, because Djokovic is outlasting Nadal in the long grinding rallies, and Nadal's service games took over 10 minutes each several times, and one game lasted 17 minutes. So stamina indeed was the key. This was a really long match. They had already reached 4 hours early in the 4th set. If it went 5 sets, the match would have lasted over 5 hours.
Ong_dynasty wrote:
I disagree. I think Nadal was ready to pounce. But I also have to say, Nadal was just not hitting the shots he would normally hit, I am unsure if that is due to Djokovic (ala what he does to Federer) or he was just off. He never took advantages of chances.
He was just so passive on his return when Djokovic was struggling with his serve in the 3rd set and when he was passive in the 4th.
It reminded me so much of wimbledon. Djokovic was better the first 2 sets, and then Nadal wins the 3rd. but what annoys me is that it seems like he just gives it away in the 4th rather than making djokovic win it. That is what is disappointing.
There are a several theories on what happened in the 4th set. Djokovic claims his slow serving confused Nadal.
Another theory is that Nadal stopped attacking, because he thought Djokovic was injured and would hand him the set/match. So Nadal started playing conservatively and just kept the ball in play. Even when Nadal got down a break, he still may have thought Djokovic just got lucky by slapping some winners. Nadal needed to realize that Djokovic actually was only serving slower, nothing else had changed. Djokovic was still moving brilliantly and hitting brilliantly.
And the theory Nadal was asked about first in his press conference, the Djokovic injury timeout:
Q. Did it put you out of your rhythm at all, the long timeout he took after the first game of the fourth set?
RAFAEL NADAL: Sorry?
Q. Did it knock you out of your rhythm when he took the long injury timeout after the first game of the fourth set after you had just won the tiebreak?
RAFAEL NADAL: We are starting the press conference in a bad way, I think. (Smiling.) Let's talk about the match. It's not the right moment to find excuses if he stops the match there or if I was tired. I fighted until the last point. I tried my best in every moment. I am happy with a lot of things, much happier than the previous matches against him. In another things I'm not that happy. But in general I think he did great, no? I had my chances. I really had my chases. At the beginning of the first I had two games to love. The first set was playing really the well beginning, and I lost a little bit the way how to play and lost a little bit the rhythm. Happened the same in the second set. You know, with that very, very long game, finally I had a mistake with the smash. So few tough points for me during the match. He's doing well. He always did well in these kind of surfaces. I always had big trouble to beat him here in this surfaces in the past. It's not an exception now, especially because he's doing better than ever. But you know what? I go back home knowing that I am on the way. You know, I like to fight, I want to enjoy about this battle against him. Six straight loses, for sure that's painful. But I'm going to work every day until that changes. So I have a goal, easy goal for me now. It's going to be tough to change the situation, but the goal is easy to see. To have a goal always you know how to work every day.
But I think Nadal may have simply run out of energy. He had played 4 matches in 5 days. Djokovic had played 4 matches in 8 days. That should make a difference 4 hours into the final, so it wouldn't surprise me if Nadal just ran out of steam. Notice that in the 4th set, Nadal stopped fist-pumping, he stopped showing the positive body language. He may simply have had no energy left to do that, and no energy left to play aggressively)