De Minaur downs Nadal – on the king of clay's own court

De Minaur downs Nadal – on the king of clay's own court

Alex de Minaur is savouring a “once in a lifetime” triumph after beating the king of clay Rafael Nadal on what could properly have been the good man’s ultimate look on his personal court docket on the Barcelona Open.

Nadal wasn’t at his sharpest on his tentative return to motion after harm in solely his second event in 15 months, however nothing ought to detract from how de Minaur outplayed the 12-time champion on the Pista Rafa Nadal on the Real Club de Tenis Barcelona on Wednesday.

De Minaur was speedy, ruthless and relentless in his 7-5 6-1 win and even when this, after all, wasn’t the all-conquering Nadal of outdated, the 37-year-old remains to be a hell of a pressure on the crimson clay and Australia’s No.1 performed a supreme match, consigning the Spanish colossus to loss of life by drop shot.

Going the place no Australian had been earlier than him by changing into the primary in 13 makes an attempt ever to beat Nadal on clay, de Minaur acknowledged what a big day it had been.

“When the draw came out, I probably wasn’t too keen on playing Rafa, but I turned my attitude around and looked at it like a huge opportunity, a once in a lifetime opportunity,” De Minaur mentioned. “I’m extremely happy that I was able to get the win.

“I’m very, very lucky I did not play Rafa a pair years earlier on the clay. It would have been very, very completely different end result. An superb expertise and we transfer on. It’s been an excellent 12 months.”

For Nadal, though, it may be the last match he ever plays on the court named in his honour in what’s set to be the final season of his glorious career.

De Minaur showed the utmost respect in applauding and not over-celebrating before Nadal soaked up a standing ovation on leaving the arena.

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But on the very first point of the match, when de Minaur slipped in an unanswerable drop shot, it had been clear there was no room for sentiment here.

He repeated the shot five times successfully in just the first three games alone to get his venerable and vulnerable opponent on the run, breaking Nadal’s delivery in the first game and four times subsequently.

“I take into consideration the one factor I may need on Rafa on clay is physicality at this stage of his profession,” de Minaur said. “I made a decision to try to make the rallies fairly bodily and lengthy, use my velocity to my benefit. It’s by no means straightforward towards him.”

Nadal’s old majesty saw him battle back into the fray in the first set but there were too many unforced mistakes emanating from his rusty racquet – 42 in all – for him to threaten.

At one point in the first set, a flashing forehand winner at full stretch off a Nadal howitzer had the Spaniard tapping his racquet in appreciation as he recognised how this new version of de Minaur, who’d beaten him in the United Cup on a hard court last year, is now a threat on any surface.

The key game came at 5-5 when de Minaur went on the attack and broke to love, before going on to serve out the set after a run of 11 unanswered winning points.

By early in the second set, Nadal looked frazzled and well beaten by the Australian, who will play rising 16th seed Arthur Fils or German Daniel Altmaier in the last-16.

On day for the Sydneysiders, Jordan Thompson additionally made it into the spherical of 16, defeating Spain’s clay-court specialist Jaume Munar 6-4 2-6 6-4. Up subsequent for him is Norway’s third seed, Casper Ruud.

Source: www.perthnow.com.au