Watching Novak Djokovic beat Rafael Nadal at the French Open on Wednesday made me think of a scene from the 1970s tennis novel World Class. In it, a top young player has had a rare bad day and suffered an upset in his biggest match of the season. When it’s over, he vows to improve his game to the point where even if he happens to be playing poorly, even if luck is against him, even if his opponent is in the zone, he’s simply too good to lose. It's every tennis player's impossible dream.
As he walked into Court Philippe Chatrier today, Djokovic had nearly made that dream come true in 2015. He was 39-2 on the season, and had won 27 straight matches. But he hadn’t weathered the ultimate test in tennis, and possibly the ultimate test in sports: Facing Nadal at Roland Garros. It has been a dream-crushing matchup for every player but one, and for the last four years it had been the one on-court task that had bedeviled Djokovic. He would begin each season by stating that a French Open title was his primary goal. He would arrive in Paris as the world’s best player, looking ready to finally complete a career Grand Slam. But something would always come along to trip Nole up against Rafa.
In 2011, he lost one round early, to Roger Federer. In 2012, in the final against Nadal, a rain-delay cut short his brilliant late rally. In 2013, he ran into the net on a crucial point in the fifth set. In 2014, he wasted energy by letting himself become needlessly frustrated. Twice he handed Nadal the title by throwing in a stunning double fault at match point. As easily as Djokovic soared above the rest of the field everywhere else, he could still be brought down to earth and dragged through the red mud by Nadal inside Chatrier.
But not this time. Rather than letting the match become a physical contest, Djokovic took crisp control of the rallies from the opening game. He won eight of the first nine points and broke Nadal with a series of hooking crosscourt forehands that pushed him wide, and well-measured drop shots that caught him off guard. Through the first four games, Djokovic played exactly the same brand of clean, controlled, smoothly dominant tennis that he has been playing all year. Is there a word that means “beyond clinical”? That’s how Novak looked in the early going.