Spain's Rafael Nadal waves to the crowd following his
first-round match against Alex Kuznetsov of the US at the
Australian Open in Melbourne yesterday. (AP Photo/Rick
Rycroft)
Rafael Nadal has a new injury - a tendon problem in his
right knee that nearly forced him to forfeit a first-round
match at the Australian Open on Monday that he won handily.
Roger Federer, defending champion Kim Clijsters and
top-seeded Caroline Wozniacki were also bothered by injuries
coming into the year's first Grand Slam event, but all
advanced in more routine fashion and appeared to be over
their ailments.
That wasn't the case with Nadal. He was bothered by a left
shoulder injury late last year, and yesterday in Melbourne
the Spaniard's right knee was heavily taped during his 6-4,
6-1, 6-1 win over Alex Kuznetsov.
"I was sitting on a chair in the hotel, I felt like a crack
on the knee ... really strange," Nadal said. "I stand up. I
felt the knee a little bit strange. I moved the leg like this
two times to try to find the feeling. After the second time,
the knee stays with an unbelievable pain completely straight.
I have no movement on the knee."
He wasn't completely sure he could play but decided to do so
after an MRI exam showed no major damage. although he still
had concerns.
"I started with a little bit of a scare at the beginning, and
nervous because I was really disappointed yesterday," he
said. "But after the first 10 games ... I started to play
with normal conditions.
Nadal added that he doesn't quite understand what happened,
but "I am really happy that today I was ready to play and I
played a fantastic match."
Federer, who pulled out of a tournament in Doha two weeks ago
because of a sore back, began his bid for his 17th Grand Slam
title - and first since the 2010 Australian Open - with a
7-5, 6-2, 6-2 win over qualifier Alexander Kudryavtsev. It
was the 60th win at the Australian Open for Federer, who also
has 60-plus wins at Wimbledon and the US Open.
The third-seeded Swiss took the first two sets and was up a
break in the third before the Russian rallied with a break of
serve in the fifth game of the final set. Federer, however,
broke Kudryavtsev in the next game with a backhand
cross-court winner and sealed the match when the Russian hit
a forehand wide.
"No problem," Federer said. "I am happy to be 100 percent
fit."
Just as quickly, he batted away speculation about a possibly
divisive issue with Nadal. Nadal was critical of Federer on
Sunday for not speaking out publicly in support of players
who are pushing the ATP for changes in scheduling and prize
money.
"Things are fine between us, you know. I have no hard
feelings towards him," Federer said. "It's been a difficult
last few months in terms of politics within the ATP."
Nadal has "mentioned many times how he gets a bit tired and
frustrated through the whole process, and I shared that with
him. It's normal. But, for me, obviously nothing changes in
terms of our relationship. I'm completely cool and relaxed
about it."
Clijsters opened with a 7-5, 6-1 win over Portuguese
qualifier Maria Joao Koehler, showing no signs of the hip
spasms that forced her to withdraw from a tuneup event in
Brisbane 10 day ago.
Wozniacki, who injured her left wrist in a quarterfinal loss
at the Sydney International, cruised past Australia's
Anastasia Rodionova 6-2, 6-1 in the last match of the evening
on Rod Laver Arena.
"I got a bit nervous about my wrist in Sydney, but I am happy
I could play full out," Wozniacki said.
Li Na, who lost the Australian final to Clijsters last year,
defeated Ksenia Pervak of Kazakhstan 6-3, 6-1. In the first
featured match of the tournament, third-seeded Victoria
Azarenka won 12 straight games to rout Heather Watson 6-1,
6-0 on centre court.
The Hisense Arena crowd was solidly behind Nadal,
particularly the groups of young women who screamed and
whistled when he changed his shirt and between games yelled,
"We love you Rafa" and "Vamos Rafa!" He didn't give them a
chance to cheer for long, needing only about 30 minutes each
to win the final two sets.
Clijsters similarly had an easy time in the second half of
her match, breaking Koehler in the deciding game of the first
set and reeling off 13 straight points to start the second.
She said the win wasn't as easy as it looked.
"It was hard to really get a good rhythm out there,"
Clijsters said. "I did feel like I was seeing the ball
probably not always as good as I would like to."
She said she'd dealt with the "emotions and stress" of her
hip injury, adding she was lucky even to get a few warmup
matches in Brisbane.
Li was a trailblazer for China last year, reaching a Grand
Slam singles final for the first time before losing to
Clijsters at Melbourne Park. At the next major, she won the
French Open to become the first player from China to win a
Grand Slam singles title.
"I hope I can go one better this year," Li said, referring to
her Australian Open campaign. She had a confidence-boosting
buildup at the Hopman Cup and Sydney.
Of the six women who can reach the top ranking, eighth-ranked
Agnieszka Radwanska has the biggest task, having to win the
Australian title. She had to scrap just to make the second
round, fending off American Bethanie Mattek-Sands 6-7 (10),
6-4, 6-2 in a three-hour match on Show Court 2.
Other women advancing included No. 16-seeded Peng Shuai of
China, No. 20 Daniela Hantuchova of Slovakia, No. 22 Julia
Goerges and No. 26 Anabel Medina Garrigues of Spain. Eleni
Daniilidou of Greece beat 41-year-old Kimiko Date-Krumm of
Japan 6-3, 6-2.
No. 19 Flavia Pennetta, No. 23 Lucie Safarova and No. 28
Yanina Wickmayer were among the first-round losers.
Most of the local attention Monday was on 19-year-old Bernard
Tomic, who rallied from two sets down to beat No. 22 Fernando
Verdasco 4-6, 6-7 (3), 6-4, 6-2, 7-5. A five-set win over the
2009 semifinalist will no doubt bolster Tomic as he attempts
to become the first Australian man since 1976 to win the
national title.
"Today wasn't fun, it was torture," said Tomic, who reached
the Wimbledon quarterfinals last year. "I don't know how I
found the energy to lift, how I did it, but I thank the
crowd."
Eighth-seeded Mardy Fish, the highest-ranked U.S. man,
defeated Gilles Muller had a 6-4, 6-4, 6-2 to progress along
with 2009 U.S. Open champion Juan Martin del Potro, No. 7
Tomas Berdych, No. 10 Nicolas Almagro, No. 13 Alexandr
Dolgopolov, No. 18 Feliciano Lopez, No. 21 Stanislas Wawrinka
and No. 30 Kevin Anderson.
No. 25 Juan Monaco, No. 28 Ivan Ljubicic and No. 31 Jurgen
Melzer joined Verdasco as other seeded players to lose.
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