Rafael Nadal is not in favor of reducing the length of matches, saying that epic encounters help the sport create a connection with the public.
Nadal was speaking from experience, as his lengthy, legendary encounters against such rivals as Roger Federer and Novak Djokovic have grabbed massive amounts of attention in recent years.
"I don't remember no[t] one match in my life—not of me, or tennis in general—that the match finished in one hour," he told reporters in Beijing. "I think [it] is not in the memory of the people, these kind of matches. The kind of matches that stays on the memory, and on the history of our sport, are a little bit long matches and dramatic matches that become emotional; the physical issues, everything.
"You need to put everything together to create a great show, to create a show that the people emotionally feel involved."
Nadal was reacting to recent suggestions by WTA CEO Steve Simon that the WTA would look at reducing the length of singles matches by bringing in no-ad scoring and super tiebreaks, which are currently used in doubles.