If you go strictly by the scoreline, it doesn’t sound like much: The No. 1 seed, Novak Djokovic, beat the No. 5 seed, 7-5, 7-6 (4), in the quarterfinals.
The victor, for one, knew better.
“It’s a straight-sets win, but it feels like we played five sets,” Djokovic said. “Winning against Nadal is the ultimate challenge on clay courts and one of the biggest challenges we have in sport.”
Djokovic knew that Nadal had pushed him to the limit, had made him sweat and scream and slam his racquet, had made him doubt, and in the end had made him come up with his very best, with the shots that only he possesses. While Nole won his seventh straight match over Rafa, and his 11th in their last 12 meetings, for the first time in a long time this felt like a rivalry. Djokovic felt it, too.
“I have to be very pleased with the way I handled myself in the biggest moments today,” he said with justifiable pride. “I won against one of my biggest rivals on his preferred surface.”
Djokovic won the way he so often wins: By coming up with exactly what he needed, at exactly the moment he needed it—nothing more, nothing less. In both sets, he hung on by a thread, but never let the thread break. This time it was Nadal, determined to be aggressive whatever the cost, who had taken the match to Djokovic from the start, and gone up an early break. Down 2-4 in the first, Djokovic had double-faulted to make it 0-30. Was he going to throw the set away, the way he had thrown away the opener against Thomaz Bellucci the previous night?
Not a chance. This time, after watching a Nadal forehand land just wide, Djokovic dug in and held after a 10-minute struggle. Like all champions, Djokovic takes what you give him and runs with it; he may not always feel confident, but by now, after so many comebacks and escapes, confidence is never far from the surface with him. Having been handed a lifeline by Nadal, Djokovic suddenly began timing his returns and swinging freely. A few minutes after looking lost, he had broken back to even the set at 4-4.
“I was fortunate in important moments,” Djokovic said. “But I managed to take him out of his comfort zone in important moments and didn’t always give him the same look....I thought he played high quality tennis. He tried to step in, he tried to be aggressive. But towards the end, I guess I was a bit more fortunate.”