Spain’s Rafael Nadal returns a shot at the French Open on Monday. (AFP-Yonhap)
PARIS (AP) ― Maybe, just maybe, Rafael Nadal was a tad vulnerable, the thinking went before this French Open.
He had lost three times on his beloved red clay already this year, more defeats than he ever had on the surface before heading to Roland Garros.
Then came an admission, after the Grand Slam tournament’s third round, that his back was bothering him and slowing his serves.
Well, leave it to the eight-time French Open champion’s upcoming quarterfinal opponent ― 2013 runner-up David Ferrer, one of the men who beat Nadal on clay this spring ― to set the record straight.
“Rafael,” Ferrer said, “is always the favorite.”
Nadal certainly looked the part in the fourth round Monday, when he won 18 points in a row during one stretch en route to beating 83rd-ranked Dusan Lajovic of Serbia 6-1, 6-2, 6-1 for a record 32nd consecutive victory at the French Open. That broke Nadal’s own mark of 31 and moved him a step closer to a fifth straight title in Paris.
The No. 1-ranked Nadal, now 63-1 for his career at the tournament, has won all 12 sets he’s played in Paris in 2014, dropping a total of 23 games.