Absent friend and rival
It's days like sleepy Sunday you miss Rafael Nadal. With the best will in the world, the day's schedule was toweringly dull. If the Spaniard had been here to prop up Novak Djokovic's side of the draw, there would have been no gap in the entertainment, although the host broadcasters, Channel 7, did their best to big up what they had to offer. A Bleacher Report poll this week showed 94.3% of fans are missing Rafa. So are some of the players, including his friend and compatriot David Ferrer.
There can't be many more reluctant sports stars than Ferrer. As he packed his bag after beating the 16th seed Kei Nishikori in straight sets in the fourth round of the Australian Open, he looked for all the world as if he would try to avoid the obligatory court-side interview. No such luck.
"He's one heck of a tennis player," the former Australian doubles specialist John Fitzgerald told fans on the open mic at the Rod Laver Arena after the Spaniard had made the quarter-finals, his fifth in a row in slams. But, even though he will soon reach No4 in the world for the first time, Ferrer was quick to point out the obvious – he's there because his friend Nadal isn't. And how many players would give a flat-out no to the question of whether or not he can win a grand slam final? "No, No," said Ferrer. "It's very difficult."
He's right, of course. It would take a seismic collapse by the favourites for Ferrer to break their stranglehold on the big titles. If he wins his quarter-final against fellow Spaniard Nicolás Almagro on Tuesday he will become only the fifth active player on the Tour to win 500 career matches. (Roger Federer the night before won his 250th in grand slams, 13 years after his first, which was against Michael Chang here in Australia). Nevertheless, Ferrer, 30, knows he won his 499th match not just because of his own doggedness but his opponent's extraordinary waywardness in the shot. Nishikori hit 65 unforced errors, enough for about three matches, let alone three sets.
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