He’s so smiley in this video but there’s something different about him but I just can’t quite put my finger on it, maybe it’s his hair slightly being off his face not quite sure though?
Here’s the new look Top Ten:
Top 10:
1 Roger Federer 11,040
2 Andy Murray 9,250
3 Rafael Nadal 8, 665
4 Novak Djokovic 7,150
5 Andy Roddick 5,800
6 Juan Martin Del Potro 5,405
7 Jo-Wilfried Tsonga 3,906
8 Nikolay Davydenko 3,655
9 Gilles Simon 3,320
10 Fernando Verdasco 3,185
It was inevitable once Rafa was ousted in the quarter-finals to Del Potro that Andy Murray would become the new world No.2. Murray who defeated Del Potro to win Montreal 6-7, 7-6, 6-1 will now become the new world No.2 when the ATP Tour Rankings are released on Monday. This then means Rafa will return to the No.3 spot for the first time since July 18th 2005 which was also the last time Rafa and Roger failed to claim the top two spots in Men’s tennis.
When Rafa returned to tennis this week he knew it would be almost impossible for him to win Montreal but merely wanted to gain some match practice and to test how his knees would cope under match pressure. Not for one minute was he concerned with losing his No.2 ranking, he was just glad to be back playing, and we all know that Andys stay at No.2 should be savoured because Rafa will soon reclaim what is rightfully his and that said Roger should also be looking behind him because Rafa is coming!!!!!

Well Rafa’s journey at Montreal ended last night when he was defeated by 20 year old Juan Martin del Potro 7-6, 6-1.
Rafa seemed like he was returning to his usual playing form which we have all become accoustumedto over the last few years, however Del Potro was just too strong but in saying this Rafa did have his chances. The first set went to a tie breaker where Rafa had a
5-2 lead but then lost five consecutive points leading to the first set heading Del Potro’s way. However even though with Rafa going out this early and his No.2 ranking at risk if Murray wins the tournament, he was very positive about it all and the most important thing the knees are they Ok, “The knees are very good, so that’s very good. Yeah, I must be very happy about this tournament, yeah.” said Rafa in his press conference. He continued to say that he found it difficult to concentrate sometimes but possibly with a few more hours court time that could be rectifyed.
Rafa and his team will now travel to Cincinnati tomarrow to continue his hard court preperation ahead of the US Open. Rafa’s draw sees him with a first round bye but will meet the winner of Seppi v Qualifier match in the second round. The other names on his side of the draw are Gael Monfils, Novak Djokovic, Karlovic, Paul-Henri Mathieu, Jo-Wilfred Tsonga, and Gilles Simon.
Courtesy of www.rafaelnadal.com
Je t’aime,” (I love you) said a deep voice coming from a 30ish male as Rafael Nadal was about to cross from Stade Uniprix into the adjacent locker room building after his 6-3, 6-2 win over Philipp Petzschner of Germany at the Rogers Cup yesterday.
“I love him really, I promise you,” the man reiterated when some people, standing nearby and also waiting for Nadal to go by, looked at him somewhat quizzically.
Defending champion Nadal has an avid following of fans. After not seeing him in competition since he was upset in the fourth round of the French Open on May 31, they are excited, and anxious, about his return to competition this week.
Just how fit and ready he is, after 10 weeks out with tendinitis in both knees, is still unclear after yesterday’s uncomplicated (and un-testing) win over the No. 45-ranked Petzschner, and only seven games played on Wednesday night before his opponent David Ferrer retired with a knee injury.
That should all change tonight when he plays No. 6-ranked Juan Martin del Potro, the 6-foot-6 Argentine who has not entirely registered on the global sports consciousness despite his impressive play.
Nadal lost to del Potro in their previous meeting, in the quarter-finals of the Sony Ericsson Open in Miami in March, and is well aware of the gangly del Potro’s explosive ground strokes and potent serve.
“I don’t know if it is going to be too much,” Nadal said about facing del Potro so soon in his return from inactivity. “But, I love the competition and I’m going to try to be ready for the match. I’m going to try my best to be competitive.”
That is probably not too hard when, on his father’s side of the family, there are three very competitive and athletic uncles - including Miguel Angel, a former World Cup soccer player for Spain, Toni, his long-time coach and a fine tennis player, as well as his namesake Rafael, who was also active in sports.
The lone un-athletic one is his father, Sebastian.
But he is anything but laid-back when it comes to supporting Rafael at tournaments, as an incident recounted in Jon Wertheim’s new book, Strokes of Genius, reveals. During the classic 2008 Wimbledon final, when Roger Federer was rallying from a two sets to love deficit, Sebastian let into his brother Toni for being too passive and for not imparting a positive, energetic vibe to Rafael as he watched from the courtside friends box.
“He likes to win but I prefer winning more than him,” Rafael said about his father yesterday.
Sebastian Nadal has been successful with a window contracting business in Mallorca, and has also recently dabbled in real estate outside Spain.
“My father is the only one in the family who never practised sports,” Nadal said. “He did well - he started from zero and now he’s a good businessman. I admire him for that.”
Going through the difficult times of his father and mother Ana Maria separating, Rafael is accompanied in Montreal by his long-time girlfriend, Xisca Perello.
As well, there are a few of his old signature sleeveless tennis tops. He needed a white top for his first doubles match and Nike was only able to come up with something white in sleeveless.
For next week in Cincinnati, where Nadal is expected to play doubles with Novak Djokovic, some of the white sleeved shirts, which he was supposed to wear at Wimbledon, will be shipped in.
For now, he is resplendent in a deep yellow bandana and matching wristbands, a rich blue shirt and white shorts with a subtle squares pattern on them.
That will be his outfit for tonight’s match against del Potro. As he struggles to find his form, his biggest hope against the Argentine, a hot player who beat Andy Roddick in the Washington final last Sunday, may be that the Argentine is tired after that long week and a gruelling 3-6, 6-3, 6-4 win over Victor Hanescu yesterday.
And Nadal knows he may be able to compensate with his inexhaustible competitive drive for what he is lacking in movement and the timing of his shots.
Whatever the result, it is a sure thing that tournament security will have the cordons out to hold the back his fervent fans when he leaves the stadium after the match.
Courtesy of www.theglobeandmail.com

Tennis ace makes second instalment in promotional series
Mallorca born Rafael Nadal, known to millions as the former world No. 1 tennis player, is bound to excite his legions of fans when his latest promotional video comes out. In it, Nadal appears bare-chested at the wheel of a yacht as he sails around the Cabrera archipelago.
This will be the second instalment in a set of three promotional videos that the tennis player is making for the Balearic Ministry of Tourism. The video will be shown for the first time at the World Travel Market fair in London this November.
Nadal is reportedly receiving around six million euros to make the videos.
Courtesy of www.themallorca.net
Rafael Nadal and Juan-Martin Del Potro of Argentina will be part of tennis history and the world Nos. 2 and 6 join the rest of the top 8 in action on Friday. Never in the history of the ATP have the top 8 players in the world made the quarterfinals of a tournament. Roger Federer completed the roster with his straight set victory over Stanislas Wawrinka. Federer, Nadal, Andy Murray, Novak Djokovic, Andy Roddick, Del Potro, Jo-Wilfried Tsonga and Nikolay Davydenko will all compete on historic Friday.
Rafael Nadal insists that he is not the favorite going into the quarterfinal match. During his press conference after his third round match against Philipp Petzschner, Nadal stated, “I am not the favorite for sure for the match of tomorrow”.
The Spaniard has been out for 2 months trying to recover from chronic knee tendinitis. Montreal marks his first tournament back since he was ousted from the French Open in the round of 16. He has beaten Del Potro 4 of the 5 times the two men have played, though Del Potro’s victory was the most recent of their matches. The Argentine got his first win off Nadal in the quarterfinals of Miami this year.
Nadal has played a match and a half in Montreal so far, owing to the retirement of opponent David Ferrer in the second round. The Spaniard seemed to be moving well against Philipp Petzschner in their third round match on Thursday, so his health does not seem to be a huge factor.
Del Potro had a far more difficult match in the third round. The Argentine went 3 sets against Romania’s Victor Hanescu and seemed a bit fatigued.
Prediction – Despite Nadal’s claims otherwise, he will still be the favorite on Friday. The Spaniard in 3.
Courtesy of www.tennistalk.com
MONTREAL — During a rain delay earlier this week, the players’ lounge at the Rogers Cup buzzed with activity — some relaxed, some hurried — as the competition moved inside.
There was Rafael Nadal, reclining on a couch with his shoeless feet propped on a table, holding court with his entourage in Spanish. There was Tony Godsick, the senior vice president of IMG Tennis and the agent to Roger Federer, sipping an espresso.
Inside this elite tennis bubble, away from the thousands of fans in the stands beyond its doors, players spoke French, Russian and English, ate doughnuts, read newspapers, argued politics, napped on couches and checked their e-mail. They left their tennis bags strewn about, separating their on-court jobs from their off-court downtime at the entryway.
“Here, they cover everybody’s interests,” said Max Mirnyi of Belarus, a winner of 36 career doubles titles, including three in Grand Slam events. “Some guys like pool. Some guys like card games. Some guys like the snack table. It’s about convenience.”
Tennis players believe their lounges are distinctive compared with those in other sports: less stodgy than those in golf and different from football locker rooms or baseball clubhouses because they share space with competitors instead of teammates.
“It may sound weird, but it’s not,” said John Isner, an American pro. “The last tournament I played, it was a real tough three-set match. Afterward, my opponent was in the next shower.”
Long recognized as among the most player-friendly tournaments on the ATP World Tour, the Rogers Cup has built a lounge for players that makes rain delays tolerable. Players could actually live in it if the tournament provided beds. While waiting for matches, or waiting out rain delays, players choose from table tennis, Foosball, pool and video games, including an old-school Pac-Man and those oversize arcade racing games played from an actual driver’s seat.
The lounge also has a poker table, complete with a dealer and chips, as if plucked from the Las Vegas Strip. One coach apparently lost a bet on Tuesday, and as he got up from the table, he removed his shirt and flexed for the room.
Norm Hartenstein, the manager of the lounge for the last 23 years, said opponents sometimes took their tennis competitions directly into table tennis during rain delays. When he tells them they have 10 minutes to get back on court, they sometimes shout, “But we’ve got to finish our game.”
This lounge serves more than gaming functions. The wireless Internet and computer stations allow players from around the world to keep in touch with family. The weight room provides space to warm up before matches, or to cool down after. The oversize couches become prime nap space.
In the lounge, players can get suits by a local designer named Yves Jean Lacasse, who gives the top-seeded players free clothes and sells suits to lesser-known players at deep discounts. In the center, behind a black curtain, players receive massages and injury-prevention testing.
The ATP started testing players three years ago, measuring their shoulders, hips and lower backs, looking for small deficits, muscle imbalances and areas of tightness.
“We’re trying to prevent the injuries before they actually need treatment,” said Todd Ellenbecker, chairman of the United States Tennis Association’s Sports Science Committee.
During delays, Isner said he often debated politics with James Blake, a fellow American. On Tuesday, Mirnyi said he filled out travel documents for an approaching tournament in China. Dick Norman, the oldest full-time player on the tour at 38, has seen the lounges evolve.
“Before, you just had a room,” Norman said. “If you were gone for four weeks, you basically had no contact with your family.”
Hartenstein said this lounge was transformed over the years from a small room with folding chairs to the bustling hub players use today. The tour itself has become more businesslike, making efforts to rid lounges of shady characters and hangers-on.
Gambling, in particular, has been a focus because of concerns about match fixing. And Hartenstein, for his part, said he was not a “big fan” of the poker presence in the lounge. No one, in fact, would talk publicly about the table or the bets placed there.
Besides managing the lounge, Hartenstein and his staff double as a concierge service for the players, setting them up with rounds of golf, fishing expeditions and, this week, AC/DC concert tickets.
They operate by a simple motto: no is not an option. They have performed emergency duty through the years, sewing patches on T-shirts, drilling or gluing shoes, or fetching jars of peanut butter for the Russians. Once, when Andre Agassi requested sugar-free Red Bull, Hartenstein said he sent a driver to the United States to buy some.
“We always find a way to make it work,” he said.
Courtesy of ww.nytimes.com
Just to let you’s know Rafa’s match against Del Potro is 6th up on Central sometime after 7pm tomarrow in what should be Rafa’s greatest test since returning to tennis.
Rafa won his 3rd round match against Petzschner 6-3, 6-2 where we looked somewhat like the old Rafa before the knees began to give him some trouble, so hopefully tomarrow evening he can continue to play well.
Vamos Rafa