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Friday, March 29, 2024

Nadal stunned in Italian Open before French Open defense

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Rome, Italy—Rafael Nadal warned he knew how to fix his errors before his French Open title defense after crashing in the quarter-finals of the Rome Masters on Saturday (Sunday Philippine time), the final warm-up before Roland Garros.

Spain’s Rafael Nadal plays a forehand to Argentina’s Diego Schwartzman for the quarter final match of the Men’s Italian Open at Foro Italico in Rome, Italy.

The nine-time Rome winner slumped 6-2, 7-5 on a humid night in the Italian capital to Argentine Diego Schwartzman, a player the second seed had beaten in all nine of their previous clashes.

It was Nadal’s last chance to tune-up before his bid for a 13th French Open, and record-equaling 20th Grand Slam to match Roger Federer in just over a week.

“It’s a completely special and unpredictable year,” said the 34-year-old.

“I’ll probably go back home and then let’s see what’s going on. I did my job here. 

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“I fought until the end. But losing that many serves, you can’t expect to win a match.

“Something that I have to fix. I know how to do it. 

“I’m going to keep working and keep practicing with the right attitude and try to give me a chance to be ready.

“I did a couple of things well and other things bad. And that’s it. At least I played three matches.”

The two-time defending champion was making his comeback after a long coronavirus-enforced break having skipped the US Open.

Nadal beat fellow Spaniard Pablo Carreno Busta, a US Open semi-finalist, 6-1, 6-1 in his first match this week followed by Serb Dusan Lajovic 6-1, 6-3.

But Schwartzman pulled out a stunning performance to leave Nadal with no answer.

“After such a long time without competing, I played good two matches, and now today I played a bad one against a good opponent,” said Nadal.

“It was not my night, at all,” he said. 

“Then we have to think internally why, how I can fix it.”

Schwartzman, with just three career titles to Nadal’s 85, said he had come close a few times to beating the Spaniard.

“I think four or five times I was close enough to feel like maybe if I play my best tennis I’m going to have chances,” said the world number 15. 

“Also, he was coming back this tournament after seven months, more or less, eight months.

“And I was thinking, OK, tennis, sometimes it’s really crazy and I was not playing good, but today maybe I have the chance.”

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