MELBOURNE—Here in Australia, it was time for the tournament to head downhill. On a muggy Sunday afternoon, the temperatures at Melbourne Park were in the 80s—still far more temperate than the triple digits of Thursday and Friday—the roll towards week two was underway. Quarterfinal berths were at stake.
But for Rafael Nadal, the path usually goes uphill. Today it took four sets and nearly four hours for Nadal to subdue 24th-seeded Diego Schwartzman, 6-3, 6-7 (4), 6-3, 6-3.
“You can't expect easy matches when you're playing in big tournaments,” said Nadal.
There’s an interesting aspect to Nadal’s approach to competition. Were the likes of Roger Federer or Grigor Dimitrov to be so extended by a player they’d never lost a set to in three prior matches (as was the case for Nadal with Schwartzman), the encounter would exist on parallel tracks—the historical leader-favorite trying to impose with brilliance, the plucky underdog seeking to counter and strike. Oppose Federer or Dimitrov and you enter a playground, a sandbox of sorts where two people strike balls, at some level even impersonally.
But versus Nadal, the court is a combat zone.
“Everybody suffers in four-hours’ match,” said Nadal.
Everybody. Years from now, Schwartzman’s grandchildren will ask him if he played Nadal. And he will gently issue a correction. No, he will say. I battled Nadal.
It was captivating. If there was zero chance in any quest to out-steady the impregnable Nadal, then Schwartzman’s only other option was to invest in the one-percent possibility and seek to take charge of points as quickly as possible. Schwartzman won the majority of rallies that lasted four shots or less (86 to 78)—darn good for a four-set loss. But he also played his share of patient points, many times seeking to extend rallies before looking to strike big.
It didn’t matter that the 5’7, 141-pound Schwartzman stood six inches shorter and weighed 47 pounds less than Nadal. What counted was that the Argentine threw himself at the ball off both sides, striking eloquently with down-the-line backhands and a smattering of forehands smacked to all areas of the court in every which way.
“He played well, and he played aggressive," said Naadal. "Yep, he did a lot of things well.”