Now, the fight is truly on and no one even saw it coming. Novak Djokovic has always been a good player on hard courts, so when he was winning match after match early in the season, critics just said, ‘Wait for the clay court season to begin, then we’ll see how good he is.’ It wasn’t that Djokovic was a bad player on clay. He was good but Nadal was so much better than the rest that it just didn’t make any sense to look beyond him. That was until now. Djokovic continued his domination over the world number one ahead of the French Open by claiming the Rome Masters crown 6-4 6-4 on Sunday as he stretched his unbeaten run this year to 37 matches, Reuters reports. [caption id=“attachment_10064” align=“alignleft” width=“380” caption=“Djokovic defeated Spain’s Rafael Nadal 6-4, 6-4 in the final to win the Rome tennis open. AFP/Filippo Monteforte”]
[/caption] The Serb, who defeated Nadal for the first time on clay in the the Madrid Open final last weekend, won his seventh consecutive title by flattening the five-times champion on the bigger points in another brutal duel. After a rain-delayed start had given him a few extra hours to recover from Friday’s draining three-hour semi-final win over Andy Murray, Djokovic broke the Nadal serve in the eighth game. He faltered on his first attempt to serve out the set but broke Nadal again with a brilliant backhand crosscourt winner to take the set. An anxious-looking Nadal fought back from 2-0 down in a fluctuating second set before Djokovic underlined his mental toughness, forcing the Spaniard into errors to break in the ninth game. Djokovic saw his first three match points go begging - thanks to two backhand errors from the Serb and an unreturnable serve from Nadal - but he made no mistake on the fourth. After whipping a forehand over the net, Djokovic saw a charging Nadal roll the ball into the net and then he promptly collapsed on to his back and let out an almighty roar to celebrate his victory. With inputs from Reuters
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