Rafael Nadal back, but knee still a sore point

Now that he finally has a competitive match under his belt after seven months on the sidelines, Rafael Nadal wants to stop talking about his injured left knee.

Nadal, whose knee problem has lingered despite ongoing therapy, marked his return to the tour with a doubles victory alongside Juan Monaco at 
a little-known clay court tournament in Chile on Tuesday.

The Spaniard had not played since 28 June when he was upset in the second round of Wimbledon by qualifier Lukas Rosol.

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Nadal and Monaco won easily in just over an hour at the VTR Open, defeating the Czech pair of Frantisek Cermak and Lukas Dlouhy 6-3, 6-2. Nadal’s practice sessions in Chile have lasted longer, and the first question centred on his knee – a sore 
subject with the Spaniard.

The former No 1-ranked Nadal addressed the question for several minutes, and then said he wanted to drop the subject and concentrate on tennis as he begins a build-up to what could be his eighth French Open title.

“The knee – I said it when I got here. I would prefer not to keep talking about the topic,” Nadal said. “At the end of the day the doctors have said it’s OK. There is no risk of making it worse. My knee keeps hurting. But the fact I am playing here is a thing of joy.

“I am not 100 per cent, I need some weeks,” he added. “If it hurts, it hurts and we’ll put up with it. I am here to play 
tennis, with or without pain. I’m happy to have played an official game, although it was doubles.”

Nadal was due to open his singles campaign last night against Argentine Federico Delbonis.

The Spaniard has been almost unbeatable on clay, winning 93 per cent of his singles matches – the highest percentage in the Open era.

Nadal has avoided surgery, and he suggested that he hoped to continue on the same path. “If one day it is worse, and one can’t compete at 100 per cent, then it can’t be done,” he said. Nadal showed quick reactions with a difficult backhand volley at the net to win the sixth game of the first set on Tuesday. Nadal and Monaco broke in the next game, and Nadal held serve in the next to make it 5-3 en route to a first-set victory.

Nadal hit several powerful forehands at sharp angles to win points, and seemed at ease moving around the court. And he drew the usual whistles from female fans as he stripped off his shirt after the win.

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“I need for the knee be stronger, to be more comfortable playing all out,” Nadal said. “There are days when the knee is not comfortable.

“I’m not going to speak more about the knee. What’s coming up is tennis, and that’s why I am here to try to play as well as I can.

“The more hours I am on the court, the better,” he added. “Today was important, but in another aspect it wasn’t so important. The most important was just to be here. There is no doubt that perhaps the result here is not the overriding thing.”

Nadal is a huge favourite to win in Chile. If he doesn’t, questions will follow him to the next two clay-court events in Brazil and Mexico – warm-ups for the French Open. But if he does win, the questions will also come up again at the next two stops in Latin America.

Toni Nadal, his uncle and coach, has said this year’s French Open will be much like Nadal’s first – so there will be nerves. 
Others have noted that the weak field in Chile is much like Nadal would face in a sweep through the first week of the French Open.

Chile, without a top player since Fernando Gonzalez retired last year, has a new hope in 16-year-old Christian Garin, who defeated Dusan Lajovic 6-3, 6-4 in the first round.