NEW YORK—After the first set of Friday night’s semifinal between Rafael Nadal and Juan Martin del Potro, ESPN’s Pam Shriver did a short sideline interview with Rafa’s uncle and coach, Toni Nadal, who is retiring after this season.
Del Potro had won the first set 6-4, and to that point he had the upper hand in the rallies. Toni wasted no time diagnosing what was wrong. “We have a problem,” he said. Rafa wasn’t hitting his forehand with enough oomph to control the rallies, even the ones that went crosscourt to Delpo’s weaker backhand. The Argentine had surprised the Nadals by hitting over that shot rather than slicing it. Either way, it wasn’t proving to be the vulnerability they thought it would be. Toni’s prescription? He thought Rafa needed to hit his forehand with more power and variability.
Uncle and nephew were on the same wavelength, it turned out. Nadal started the second set hitting with more depth and height. After that, he began opening up the court and going down the line with his forehand. From there, the winners began to flow and the match turned around completely. Instead of trying to grind Delpo down, Nadal set himself free to use his full shot-making repertoire. He won points with down-the-line forehands, great gets, backhand passes and well-timed serve-and-volley forays.