The Province

Djokovic and Nadal both chase history

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PARIS — Novak Djokovic has won 27 matches in a row at Grand Slam tournament­s. If he can make that 28 by beating Rafael Nadal in today’s French Open final, Djokovic will earn a fourth consecutiv­e major title, something no man has accomplish­ed since 1969.

Tough to imagine someone so close to such a historic achievemen­t being an underdog, yet that’s exactly what Djokovic is. Even the 25-year-old Serb says so.

“You can say that he’s a favourite, definitely,” Djokovic conceded.

Really? Even though Djokovic beat Nadal in each of the past three Grand Slam finals?

Well, yes. Because as good as Djokovic is on all surfaces and in all settings at the moment, no one has ever been as good as Nadal is on the red clay of Roland Garros. Set aside that Nadal owns 10 Grand Slam titles overall, twice as many as Djokovic, and simply consider the 26-year-old spaniard’s superb French Open bona fides.

While Djokovic hopes to complete a “Novak Slam” — only two other men have ever been the reigning champion at all four Grand Slam tournament­s simultaneo­usly — Nadal seeks his record seventh trophy at the French Open. Only Nadal and Bjorn Borg have won the title six times.

Nadalis51-1 at his favourite tournament, including 3-0 against Djokovic, who’s never before reached the final in Paris.

Nadal’s only loss came against Robin Soderling in the fourth round in 2009. And, amazingly, Nadal might be better than ever.he has won every set he’s played over the past two weeks, losing a total of only 35 games through six matches.

“Going to be a difficult match for me,” Nadal said. “Hopefully, for him, too.”

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