Rafael Nadal said he was “suffering” but having “fun” alongside Carlos Alcaraz after the Spanish dream team reached the men’s doubles quarter-finals at the Paris Olympics on Tuesday.

The pair, dubbed “Nadalcaraz”, edged out Dutch opponents Tallon Griekspoor and Wesley Koolhof in their second-round clash in cloying heat at Roland Garros winning 6-4, 6-7 (2/7), 10-2.

The packed crowd on Court Suzanne Lenglen made no secret of their support for the Spaniards regularly chanting: “Let’s go Rafa, let’s go”.

Nadal mentioned that they had fun because the score was positive in the match tie-break.

He noted that they had been suffering but were enjoying playing together, creating good synergies and good energy, leading to fun in general terms.

He added that their positive relationship outside the court helped inside the court as well.

Nadal, 38, said the switch to doubles tennis was tough for singles specialists.

“We are not used to playing doubles so the only way to make that work well is to play with happiness, with energy, with high energy,” he said. “That’s what we are trying to do.”

The red-shirted Nadal was dumped out of the singles by Novak Djokovic on Monday but emerged alongside his 21-year-old teammate to loud applause from the expectant crowd 24 hours later.

The Spaniards regularly put their opponents under pressure on serve in the opening set and finally broke in the seventh game when Alcaraz ripped a cross-court forehand winner.

French Open and Wimbledon champion Alcaraz served out as the Spaniards wrapped up the set 6-4 in 54 minutes.

The left-handed Nadal was wearing strapping on his right thigh but appeared unhindered, producing some athletic tennis at the net alongside his trademark punishing forehands.

Both teams missed chances to break towards the end of a tight second set and the Dutch dominated the resulting tie-break to level the contest.

But the pendulum swung dramatically in the match tie-break as Nadal and Alcaraz surged into a 5-0 lead, running out 10-2 winners after two hours and 22 minutes.

Alcaraz said it was a “dream come true” to play alongside his compatriot, 17 years his senior.

Alcaraz told that playing on the same side of the net with Rafa and learning from him was unbelievable.

He noted learning how to deal with various situations, such as when Rafa said ‘Come on’ or something similar, and he tried to enjoy every single second out there.

The Spanish pair will face US fourth seeds Austin Krajicek and Rajeev Ram in the last eight.

The injury-hit Nadal, a 14-time French Open singles champion, is playing just his seventh tournament of 2024 in a season in which his ranking has plummeted to 161.

He is aiming to capture a third Olympic title after his 2008 singles win and his doubles triumph in 2016.

With AFP

Tags :

Subscribe to our newsletter

Newsletter signup

Please wait...

Thank you for sign up!