Djokovic stuns clay king Nadal in Madrid final

MADRID, (Reuters) – A relentless Novak Djokovic  dethroned clay king Rafa Nadal on the Spaniard’s home soil and  maintained his extraordinary season when he stunned the world  number one 7-5 6-4 to win the Madrid Masters title ysterday.

The Serbian second seed ground down the local favourite and  defending champion during a succession of ferocious rallies to  record his 32nd consecutive win of a defeat-free 2011, the best  season start since John McEnroe’s 42-match streak in 1984.

The defeat marked Nadal’s first reverse on his beloved clay  in 38 matches since he fell to Robin Soderling in the fourth  round of the 2009 French Open and denied him a third title on  the red dirt in under a month after he won back-to-back titles at the  Monte Carlo Masters and Barcelona Open in April.

Rafael Nadal

Djokovic, who had never beaten Nadal on clay in nine  previous attempts, now has six titles this year, including the  Australian Open and the Masters in Indian Wells and Miami, where  he beat Nadal in both finals.

The question now is whether the 23-year-old can carry the  momentum into the French Open later this month, the only one of  the four grand slams played on clay where champion Nadal has  claimed five of the past six crowns.

“First of all to Rafa bad luck today,” Djokovic said after  collecting his winners trophy and 590,000 euros ($824,200) first  prize. “It’s always a big challenge to play you, you are a great  champion. Hopefully we can have many more matches.”

AUDACIOUS LOB

Novak Djokovic

With the sliding roof open to the pale blue evening sky, one  side of the futuristic Magic Box stadium was still bathed in  sunshine when the match began.

A fired-up Djokovic came out on top in most of the lengthy  exchanges in the early stages and surged into a 4-0 lead that  prompted nervous mutterings among the home support in the  packed, 12,500-capacity arena.

Ever the fighter, Nadal clawed his way back to 4-5 with two  breaks and saved three Djokovic set points on his own serve to  draw level at 5-5.

However, it was all in vain as the Serb held confidently and  then broke Nadal for a third time to move a set ahead.

The Spaniard picked himself up and began the second set  strongly, conjuring an incredible shot on the way to breaking  Djokovic in the opening game.

After the Serb lifted the ball over Nadal’s head to the back  of the court, he chased it down and played an audacious lob from  between his legs and with his back to the net that looped over  his opponent and landed just inside the baseline.

A bemused-looking Djokovic could only applaud as the crowd  leapt to their feet as one.
Nadal indulged in some characteristic fist-pumping but the  euphoria did not last long as he dropped his serve in the next  game to make it 1-1.