No-one happier to see Nadal firing for Paris than Federer

LONDON, (Reuters) – Rafa Nadal used to mess with his  head, ruffle his feathers and on occasions even make him cry,  but no-one will be happier to see the Mallorcan rekindle his  love affair with Roland Garros more than Roger Federer.  

When the French Open begins on Sunday the men’s drawsheet  will have a familiar look with Swiss world number one Federer  and his claycourt nemesis seperated by 126 other players — six  wins each away from an eighth grand slam final clash.  

Twelve months ago Nadal’s lock on Roland Garros was cracked  by Sweden’s Robin Soderling in a stunning fourth-round loss and  Federer slid through the door to claim the elusive major he  craved.  

It completed his career slam and as the Swiss marched on to  claim a record breaking 15th major at Wimbledon a few weeks  later, Nadal watched from afar in Spain, the tendonitis in his  knees casting doubts over his career and his off-court harmony  shattered by his parents split.  
Suddenly a classic rivalry that had elevated men’s tennis to  supreme new heights looked in jeopardy.
  
Nadal’s aura faded to such an extent that after returning in  Montreal he failed to win a title for the rest of the year and  when he was outgunned by Briton Andy Murray in the  quarter-finals of the Australian Open this year many thought his  swashbuckling days were behind him at the age of 23.  
Thankfully, talk of his demise was greatly exaggerated and  the reassuring feel of red dust under his feet has re-ignited  Nadal’s engines and after dropping just 14 games on his way to a  sixth successive Monte Carlo title last month the world knew  that Rafa was back.  
Not that Federer, who will arrive in Paris as top seed but  without a title since the Australian Open, ever doubted it. 
 
“I expected him to come back strong, for me he was never  gone,” Federer said last week in Madrid before they met in a  final for the first time in more than a year — Nadal’s victory  taking him past Andre Agassi’s record of 17 Masters titles.  

“I knew that once the French and once the claycourt season  came around he was would be very hard to beat. He has come up  with some incredible stuff recently. He’s Rafa Nadal after all.”  

Whereas many of his 13 previous defeats against Nadal gnawed  away at Federer’s ego, the Swiss was sanguine after losing in  the Spanish capital, clearly pleased to have his sparring  partner on the other side of the net again.  

Federer needs the challenge of a fit and firing Nadal and  while last year’s French Open title confirmed him as the  greatest all-round player to wield a racket, he would have loved  to have won it by beating the Spaniard.