NASTY NADAL ACCUSED IN 'CHEAT' STORM
- From: Dave Hazelwood <the_big_kahuna@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Mon, 09 Jul 2007 06:50:28 GMT
NASTY NADAL ACCUSED IN 'CHEAT' STORM
Sunday July 8,2007
Harry Pratt at Wimbledon
Rafael Nadal, who breezed past the injury-ravaged Novak Djokovic in
yesterday?s semi-final, today stands accused of being a locker room
bully and an on-court cheat.
The amazing attack on the brilliant Spaniard, through to his second
successive Wimbledon final, comes from the former coach of Aussie ace
Lleyton Hewitt.
French Open champion Nadal was heavily criticised last week after a
stormy third-round clash against Roger Soderling who accused him of
time-wasting throughout.
And now Roger Rasheed, who worked with Hewitt for four years, has
stoked up the controversy further by claiming Nadal not only breaks
the rules during matches but also bullies opponents beforehand.
Rasheed rapped: ?In the locker room Rafa is very intense. He?s always
running around and trying to apply the intimidation factor.
?The referee can come in and say ?We?re ready to play? but sure enough
he just has to go to the toilet one more time and then sits there
making his opponent wait for another minute.
?Then he goes out and does the same on court ? by taking 30 to 40
seconds after very point.
?That?s part of his persona but it?s up to the opposition and the
officials not to let it happen.
?Whenever Lleyton played Rafa, I?d have a word with the umpire to make
sure that after the coin toss he?d warn him about the time issue.
?Rafa used to get upset about this. He doesn?t like referees speaking
to him in this manner. But the rules must be enforced.?
Whether No. 2 seed Nadal employed any such tactics in yesterday?s
victory over Djokovic is unclear.
But the way the Serb was limping around the No 1 court like a wounded
animal from the off did make you wonder what might have gone on behind
closed doors.
Only joking, of course. The fact Djokovic?s previous two matches had
lasted 10 hours was the real reason for retiring midway through
yesterday?s semi-final.
Locked at one-set-all but trailing 1-4 in the third, the marathon man
from Belgrade clearly could not go on.
The pain in his swollen, blistered left foot was just too much ? and
so he understandably called time on his sensational fortnight.
The No. 4 seed admitted: ?It?s disappointing but I have had the best
two weeks ever and have played some of my best tennis.
?I am sad but the injury was stronger than me. I didn?t want to make
it worse.?
When he broke Nadal at the first attempt and took the opening set 6-3,
it seemed Djokovic might be on course for his second win in six
attempts against the Mallorca powerhouse.
But that was to discount Nadal?s resilience and he hit back to take
the next set 6-1, breaking serve three times.
The third set was an identical story with Nadal storming ahead with
two more breaks before Djokovic quit.
As for his Nadal?s chances of going one step further than 12 months
ago and ending the reign of invincible Roger Federer, he is cautiously
optimistic, declaring: ?I have one more year of experience and
important matches. That?s good.?
He added: ?I will give it my best and believe I can do it.?
http://newsgroups.derkeiler.com/Archive/Rec/rec.sport.tennis/2007-07/msg05938.html
It's Time to Stop Rafael Nadal's Cheating
Time to crack down on Rafael Nadal's cheating. That's right, he's cheating. Everyone knows it and no one seems to care.
Now, it's so openly accepted and forgiven that he apparently has even admitted to it. The Spanish newspaper El Pais asked him about looking to his coaches box during the final of the U.S. Open, when he beat Novak Djokovic, and Nadal reportedly said this:
"It was in the last game, when I was serving for the match. ... I didn't know where to serve. Down the center, to the middle or to try the classic play of the wide serve and then try to hit the forehand. They told me to serve wide and that's where I served."
They told him? It is against the rules to receive coaching during a match. Nadal knows it, too.
"The rules are the rules," he said at Wimbledon, when Toni Nadal, his uncle and coach, was fined $2,000 for coaching Rafa in a match. A few years ago, too, Roger Federer grumbled that Uncle Toni was trying to give advice from the stands.
It might not seem like a big deal, but it is. You see players doing it all the time in tennis, as this is its open secret. But it's still wrong.
I don't accept it, and neither should tennis' governing bodies. It is time to suspend Uncle Toni, boot him from a major tournament. And hit Nadal with a big fine.
Plenty of people, even within the game, think the better plan is to simply dump the rule. They are wrong. This is not the jaywalking of tennis rules. It is a basic tenet of the game, the guts of what tennis is about.
In fact, I would say it is the point of tennis: You are standing on a court alone, without help. You make the decisions, execute the shots. You are testing your body, your mind, your nerve.
Not your uncle's.
After completing the career Grand Slam and finally winning the U.S. Open, Nadal enters the "Greatest of All Time" conversation. -- Read Column The coaches have their time, and it's before the match. At some point, the players have to be able to think on their own.
Sure, there is coaching in other sports, but that is about their culture. Tennis is a test of your individuality, a game played without help. In fact, when a player cramps up, in tennis he is not seen as hurt, but as unfit and unprepared physically.
It's about personal responsibility, not asking your uncle where to serve.
The problem is that this cheating has become so commonplace that it has been half-legislated. Players can be coached in the Davis Cup. And the women's tour allows a certain number of coaching visits, mostly as a TV gimmick. A coach puts on a mic and you get to hear him talk with the player.
But when the coaches come out to talk, it makes them look so weak, in need of a coach, usually a man, to hold their hands and explain what they should do.
Yuck. More than any other sport, women's tennis players have a chance to show young girls what a strong and independent woman can do. Yet Justine Henin cannot go two points without looking to her coaches box.
At this year's U.S. Open, I went to a girls junior semifinal match. It was American Sloane Stephens against Russian Daria Gavrilova, who is 16.
http://www.aolnews.com/2010/09/30/its-time-to-stop-rafael-nadals-cheating/
HEY!?!? NADAL CHEATED!!!?
He called the trainer, just when Petzschner was having his momentum. When he started playing again, he was running fine, and his strokes were as good as always. He got Petzschner to get unfocused, and now he is in total control of the match.
I dont want to be rude to rafa, but he should be fined!! Plus, he was also chatting with Toni during that changeover. I mean, if he'd have been really injured, he would have taken some more time to get used to the match again, but he didnt!! it was almost as nothing had happened!!
But I gotta admit it was a little Petzschner's fault, cause while nadal was getting treated, he was sitting on the chair, instead of moving a little while waiting for his rival.
http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20100626101142AASOCj3
Did NADAL cheat like TORRES yesterday?
What makes Spain the cheats they are?The guy was two sets to one down and wanted a "medical" time out- when he clearly wasn't injured
and
broke the opponents momentum and serve
What a cheat!
just like
Fernando "I will tackle myself" Torres
OQ- Who ousted Spain in Euro 2004?? Please remind me..
http://in.answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20100627012919AApBva1
Rafael Nadal: Did he cheat to win the 2010 US Open?
It has been four weeks since Rafael Nadal won his first tournament at Flushing Meadows, with his triumph against World Number 2 Novak Djokovic at the 2010 US Open tournament. In the month that has passed since this victory, the Internet has been inundated with rumours claiming that Rafa cheated to win the Cup, and that the related tennis authorities – the United States Tennis Association and the Association of Tennis Professionals – chose to turn a blind eye to it.
So the question that remains to be answered is: did the World Number 1 actually cheat to win his first Grand Slam title at Flushing Meadows?
The answer is yes.
In tennis, one of the tenets of the game is that the player is on his or her own during a match. While coaches have every opportunity in the world to help their protégés before a match, when the player is competing it is him against his opponent, and his only weapons should be a racquet, a tennis ball, talent, and sound judgement.
What tennis is not about, is taking advice from your uncle in the coach’s box. This is a blatant disregard of the basic principles that make up the grounds of tennis, and Toni Nadal, Rafa’s coach, has been guilty of flouting it multiple times. The first player to point this out was current World Number 3, Roger Federer, who grouched that Toni was trying to give his nephew advice during a match. This year, the coach was fined $2000 during a match for offering help to Nadal during a match; when asked for an opinion about this, he said, “The rules are the rules.” He also added, “Sometimes in the past, Toni talks maybe too much. But not today in my opinion.” However, as far as rules go, Nadal does not seem to care for following them – perhaps because there are no consequences, and this offence is now the open secret of tennis.
In fact, Rafa has even given an interview confirming that he did receive coaching during the match. He was quoted in the Spanish newspaper El Pais as saying, “It was in the last game, when I was serving for the match. … I didn’t know where to serve. Down the centre, to the middle or to try the classic play of the wide serve and then try to hit the forehand. They told me to serve wide and that’s where I served.”
In a match, coaching has become an accepted broken rule, on many occasions. Maybe it is unfair to Nadal to hit him hard with a fine for this, since he’s been getting away with it due to a general lack of action from the authorities. The worst part of it all is not Rafa’s mistake, or cheating: it is a failure of the system to take proper action against it. The rule should either be enforced properly, or it should be withdrawn, and in-match coaching made legal. However, the game will lose a cornerstone on the day that the no coaching rule dies; it will no longer be the player, his nerve, and his strength, but a more experienced third person playing the match for him.
Christopher Mayers
(tennis expert)
http://www.gnepse.com/rafael-nadal-did-he-cheat-to-win-the-2010-us-open/
Ljubicic Stuns Nadal BNP Paribas Open SF 2010 (Final Set Tiebreaker)
Angry Rafa arguing with the Umpire
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Pfft, anyone ACTUALLY watching knows Nadal is cheating. He hits the ball before the linesman calls out. Its deceiving because Nadal wanted to challenge the call after he hit it because HE believed it was out. End of story.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2Fq8EuOlkIQ
Nadal attacks a camera man after losing Roland Garros 2009?
I heard that Rafael have attacked one camera man after he lost against Soderling, but I can't find the video. If someone knows something, please share. :)
http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20110518081719AABugWN
Bonzie
Has there ever been a time where nadal has called for injury time-out when winning. Shame on him. He does this almost every other time when he is close to losing. Can't stand that cheat.
http://www.rogerfederer.com/en/esp/news-detail/news/1021-roger-bat-koeniglichen-auftritt.html?tx_comments_pi1[page]=11&cHash=1f86393733159b9e596824f09710fe44
Rafael Nadal's Knee Problems a Thing of the Past?
Following the French Open last year, the tennis world was shocked to hear that Rafael Nadal would be away from competitive tennis for a period of over two months. A period that would see him unable to defend his hard-earned Wimbledon title and eventually losing his No. 1 ranking, which he had so deservedly attained.
The culprit?
Knee tendinitis.
When he finally made the first of his long awaited returns at the 2009 Roger's Cup, it was clear that he was not the same player the tour had come to fear. Sure, he lacked some confidence, but more importantly he wasn't moving like his old self and it seemed he was missing his patented never-say-die attitude.
Somewhat surprisingly, he refused to let the lack of success and his apparently still bothersome knees deter him from finishing the remainder of the season.
Come this year's Australian Open, all eyes were on the Spaniard. After the much deserved break he was back under the microscope. Every round he advanced seemed to solidify his healthy return to the game.
Then, in the quarterfinals, disaster struck. After playing two extremely high level, physical sets against Andy Murray, Nadal made the difficult decision to retire due to pain in his knees. Yet another title forced out of his grips by the chronic sports injury.
Despite the withdrawal, Nadal seemed more optimistic than after his first long-term absence. He assured the tennis world that he would be back in time for the year’s first Masters 1000 title in Indian Well, and he did not disappoint. He played a very high level tournament, losing to eventual champion Ivan Ljubicic, who in total would be responsible for the exits of three top-10 seeds.
More importantly, he showed no signs of discomfort throughout any of his matches while maintaining the sort of level of tennis that saw him challenge for the No. 1 ranking over a year ago.
The same could be said for Masters 1000 Miami. By the fourth round Nadal was the last remaining top-four seed in the tournament, and in the quarters he continued his rampage by dismissing a very in-form Jo-Wilfried Tsonga. He then went on to face Andy Roddick in the semis.
In their last three meetings, all on different surfaces, Nadal had not given up a single set against the American, and after the first set it seemed the trend would continue. Roddick, however, appeared to change his game plan in the second as he began to hit bigger and take more risk. The risks paid off big time, and Roddick eventually went on to win the match, seemingly surprising Nadal with his sudden offensive play.
It was generally accepted that Roddick simply played too well and Nadal could not have done much more at that point. While Roddick did play very well beginning in the second set, Nadal did not seem quite himself in the latter stages of the match. On a couple occasions he simply gave up on shots that one would expect him to run down.
He also sprayed a few forehands, making it look like he was rushing, desperate to keep the points short. This was not the new, more selective and aggressive Nadal that we had seen throughout the rest of the tournament; this was a Nadal who had something else on his mind.
Many who watched his match against Roddick may not have noticed odd behaviour from Nadal during a change-over midway through the third set.
For those interested, here it is.
While sitting down, a very frustrated Nadal could be seen yelling at his corner and pounding angrily on his left knee.
Never had he shown this level of frustration over a physical ailment in the past. On previous occasions, Nadal would opt for injury time outs, requesting the trainer maintaining a cool, calm demeanour. This time it looked as if his worst fear, something he thought he had seen the last of, was showing its ugly face once again.
So could it be that the sceptics were right all along? Has Nadal indeed burnt out?
For the sake of the sport, let's hope not.
http://bleacherreport.com/articles/375102-rafa-nadals-knee-problems-a-thing-of-the-past-maybe-not
steve Reply:
September 21st, 2010 at 7:05 pm
Nonsense, utter nonsense.
Here’s Federer after various big losses:
AO ’05, SF, l. to Safin:
“He was the better player in the end, you know, because we don’t have ties or draws in tennis. So the winner is the better man, and that’s him.”
FO ’08, F, l. to Nadal:
“Rafa played well today, made it hard for me, and, yeah, was better.”
W ’08, F, l. to Nadal:
“Rafa served well and played well and deserved to win in the end.”
USO ’09, F, l. to Del Potro:
“I thought Juan Martin played great. I thought he hung in there and gave himself chances, and in the end was the better man.”
This sound like a poor sportsman to you?
Nadal’s modesty is really just a way of taking the pressure off himself. He wants the privileges and praise that go with success, but he doesn’t want the burdens and responsibilities that necessarily come with it–pressure to perform, media scrutiny, other players wanting to kick your ass, etc.
I guarantee you he will claim that he is not the favorite at AO, despite having won 3 straight majors. That is nonsensical–how can you not be the favorite if you’ve won all four majors, including the AO, and 3 consecutive, and are number 1 by a large margin?
Most other great champions–Federer, Sampras, Serena Williams–have willingly accepted the burdens that come with being number 1, as the price they must pay for their exalted position. Nadal doesn’t think he has to pay any price whatsoever, but he’s happy to take the sweet and leave the sour for others.
The same thing goes with his membership on the Players’ Council. Federer uses his position on the council to advance the good of the sport as a whole. He understands that he has an obligation to the players who voted for him to represent their interests fairly and to eschew his own narrow self-interest in favor of the good of the tennis community. Although he has stated that of course he’d personally like more grass-court events, he has always said that that wouldn’t be fair to everyone to do that.
Nadal also has a position on the Player’s Council, but he uses it in a completely self-aggrandizing way. He pushes for more clay-court events and fewer hard-court events, which of course means more opportunities for him to win titles and ranking points.
He already wins at least two clay Masters titles and one clay Grand Slam pretty much every year, and it’s still not enough for him.
It’s an abuse of trust, because he’s not representing the interests of the players who voted him into his powerful position, but instead using it for his own personal benefit and putting himself and his own needs above the community.
This is why I find his sanctimonious moralizing (“people who write lies about people are bad people”) so totally empty. His idea of what’s fair and moral is identical with what’s good for him personally. It’s a very childish perspective.
Nadal’s behavior may seem like modesty, but it is really an act of supreme arrogance toward the tennis community–he is saying that despite the great debt he owes that community, and the fact that it has accorded him its highest honors, he is above its rules and doesn’t have any obligations toward it.
Either he is a citizen of that community or he is not–if he is, then he has to play by its rules. If not, then he has to accept being an outsider and forgo the benefits of citizenship. And so far he has had it both ways–enjoying the privileges of the community while thumbing his nose at its rules.
It amazes me that he has gone so long without being called on it, but then again this world is full of inattentive and careless people who are slow to see these things and who are easily flattered by ingratiating behavior.
Federer has been recognized with the Stefan Edberg Sportsmanship Award five times. This award is voted for by the players themselves. A majority of the players apparently think he’s a great sportsman; do you know something they don’t?
Many young players have spoken warmly of how Federer has taken the time to talk to them and help them in various ways; Sam Querrey mentioned how he got a text from Federer wishing him well after his near-career-ending accident, John Isner remarked that Federer congratulated him on his first title win, and also sat down with him for a conversation about how to deal with recovering from mono.
He doesn’t have to do any of this; he’s a busy man with many commitments. Just being at the top of tennis would be enough of a burden for most people; to say nothing of running his own charitable foundation and his multitude of business obligations while also raising a family. Yet he finds the time to take an interest in all aspects of the game, and players at all levels, from the bottom to the top.
And you dismiss Federer because a few tears shed. What a shallow and superficial way to judge such a great man!http://ruansfedererblog.com/?p=3590
nadal described this as an "accident", i was like wad? what a way to "give credit" to your opponent.
Accident .. definitely in Nadal's head.. not in the whole world's head... you play shit tennis you lose... And Nadal for the last 10 months has been giving all kinds of shit excuse and now he has crossed all limits..i cant believe he said that.. there were clear winners from Jubicic racket in TB.