However, the typically modest Nadal praised himself a little, too.
"I played great. I played so well this afternoon, playing very aggressive, backhand, forehand, serve. I'm defending well, returning well," said Nadal, affording himself another rare compliment. "It is difficult to play better than today. Being honest, I have to recognize that."
Nadal recently returned from a right hip injury, which forced him to retire during the Australian Open quarterfinals. The problem then flared up again, and he dropped out of the Mexico Open and Masters tournaments at Indian Wells and Miami.
But since coming back in early April, Nadal has not even dropped a set in five straight wins, including two in singles for Spain in the Davis Cup. He needs to win this tournament to keep his No. 1 ranking, or it will go back to Roger Federer.
The way he dismantled Thiem, it appears little can stop him from doing so.
"The Davis Cup probably helped to come here with better rhythm, better confidence," Nadal said. "But, of course, things are going much better than what I thought two weeks, three weeks ago. That's the truth."
Nadal will next face Grigor Dimitrov, who may prefer not to think too much about their head-to-head rivalry: 10-1 to Nadal.
The fourth-seeded Bulgarian beat No. 6 David Goffin 6-4, 7-6 (5) in an error-strewn match.
Match Point: Dimitrov d. Goffin