“He’s always the same,” Feliciano Lopez once said of Rafael Nadal. Rafa’s friend and Davis Cup teammate described him as perpetually upbeat and friendly. “Like a kid”—minus the mood swings.
Lopez made this comment a few years ago, but it felt more relevant than ever on Sunday. That’s when Nadal beat another of his countrymen, Albert Ramos-Vinolas 6-1, 6-3 for this 10th title in Monte Carlo, the most by any man at a single tournament in the Open era. When the match was over, Rafa and the rest of the crowd watched a video looking back at his 10 wins. Once the long hair of his youth had been shed, it was hard to tell one trophy ceremony from the next.
But this Sunday’s match was a bigger occasion than most. Along with his 10th championship in Monte Carlo, he was going for his 50th clay-court title, which would break a tie with Guillermo Vilas for the most by a male player. Just as important, Nadal was trying to win his first tournament of 2017, after three runner-up finishes. Yet Rafa went to work as he always has. Few players wall themselves off so completely from everything around them.
The ancient rituals were intact. He placed the water bottles just so. He cleaned the baseline with his foot at the start of every return game. Before each serve, he bounced the ball the same number of times as he wiped the sweat from his face. These customs are often and easily mocked, but they help keep Nadal’s mind narrowly focused on the task at hand, and keep him marching to a familiar rhythm.
There was a familiar rhythm to Nadal’s play in this match as well, but it came with a slight variation. Since Ramos-Vinolas is a fellow lefty, Rafa pounded his forehands inside-out, rather than crosscourt, to get them into his opponent’s backhand. Aside from that, Nadal’s clay-court arsenal was as complete as it was in 2006, when he beat Roger Federer in the final, or 2010, when he lost just 14 games en route to the trophy.
There was the dipping forehand pass. There was the look-one-way, hit-it-another flick crosscourt forehand pass. There were the down-the-line winners from both wings that are always an indicator of confidence. There were good serves when he needed them. There was the vintage, masterful way he has of working the angles of the court and creating openings.