Hyderabad: The 2020 French Open fortnight came to a roller coaster ending at Paris' architectural heritage Roland Garros on Sunday. The 'King of Clay', as he is fondly called, Rafael Nadal held aloft the Coupe des Mousquetaires to complete his second quadruple at Paris. In the women's singles final, in a Rafaesque display of powerful tennis, teenage Iga Swiatek notched up a history for her country becoming the first player from Poland to win a Grand Slam title. Entered the French Open ranked 54, she became the lowest-ranked woman to win the French Open in Open Era.
Unlike the previous editions, the just-concluded French Open was different in many ways. Played in the backdrop of coronavirus situations, players, who are familiar with playing in the warmth of Paris summer, had to accustom and endure the autumnal cold and rain. Usually played under the shining blue sky with the summer's bright sun showing its might at clay, the Philippe Chatrier court came up with its brand new retractable roof cover to keep the dust remain. In another first, the matches had to be played under floodlights, while the slow and heavy Wilson balls made Roland Garros' clay-court tennis fundamentally different.
However, among all these changes, what remained the same was Rafael Nadal's domination at the Roland Garros. The Spaniard, who skipped this year's US Open citing the fear of coronavirus infection, won the French Open for a record-extending 13th time in 15 years, and he marked the moment with his trademark trophy biting celebration.
Nadal's straight-sets destruction of World No. 1 Novak Djokovic, his ardent rival, propelled him to 20 Grand Slam titles, a feat which brought him on par with Roger Federer's men's record of 20 Majors. However, Nadal's preparations for his favourite Grand Slam tournament was far from perfect. Due to the ravaging coronavirus situation in his home country, he couldn't get enough outdoor practice. The result of being deprived of intense training was evident when he lost the Italian Open quarterfinal in Rome to World No. 8 Diego Schwartzman in September. This defeat meant the 34-year-old had to enter the French Open without winning a clay-court tournament for the first time in his career.
But the way he negated the Serbian's mountainous challenge to reach an unprecedented height of his career worths millions of appreciations. It was a very special victory for Nadal as Djokovic was unbeaten in five straight Grand Slam finals. And his only loss in 38 matches this year was a disqualification for an unfortunate incident when he struck a female lines official in the throat with the ball in the US Open last month.