Paris, June 09: Rafael Nadal left not one but two great champions red-faced at Roland Garros over the weekend after his fourth successive French Open triumph.
As a winner of 11 grand slam titles, including six at the French Open, Bjorn Borg would have been expected to be a reliable source when it comes to making some predictions about the final between Nadal and world number one Roger Federer.
"A lot of people say no one can beat Nadal the way he's been playing. But I think Roger has a really, really good chance," the great Swede said on the eve of Sunday's final.
Wrong: Federer lost 6-1 6-3 6-0.
"I think it's going to be a really open final. I think it's going to be a long match, very close, close match," added Borg.
Wrong again: Nadal won the most lopsided men's final in Paris since 1977 and at one hour 48 minutes, it was the shortest final clocked since 1980.
"If Roger wins Paris, no doubt he's the greatest player who ever played the game," said Borg.
That remains to be seen after the Swiss's performance on Sunday.
So one sided was the contest, Nadal was embarrassed to celebrate his win while Federer must have been even more embarrassed to pocket the 530,000 euros runner's up cheque.
Since making his grand slam debut at Roland Garros in 1999, Federer had piled up a 149-23 win-loss record at the four majors going into Sunday's final. None of those losses will hurt him or haunt him as much as defeat number 24.
The man who has built up a reputation of cutting his opponents down to size was, for once, on the receiving end of an absolute mauling.
It was certainly not the kind of exhibition fans would have expected from a 12-times grand slam champion. In fact, Federer won fewer games than Dinara Safina had a day earlier in the women's showpiece match.
The Russian, playing in her first grand slam final, was beaten 6-4 6-3 by Ana Ivanovic.
"After a loss like this you don't want to play Rafa again tomorrow, that's for sure," summed up a shell-shocked Federer.
Instead of becoming only the sixth man to win all-four major titles, as Federer had hoped he would on Sunday, he earned the dubious distinction of becoming the first man to lose three successive French Open finals.
Nadal's brutal display over the fortnight, when he became the first man since Borg in 1980 to win the title without dropping a set, proved that he has no equal on clay.
He also joined Borg as the only men to have won four in a row here since the event went international in 1925 and on current evidence, only his health will stop him from extending his perfect 28-0 Roland Garros record when the tournament opens it gates for the 2009 edition.
Asked to explain the secret to his success, Nadal said: "Well, if you have no special motivation for a tournament like Roland Garros you can retire, go home, fishing, have a boat, enjoy the life, no?"
Predictably Federer will look for salvation on grass and at Wimbledon, where he is undefeated for five years. Unfortunately for him, Nadal will be snapping at his heels there too.
The 22-year-old stretched Federer to five sets in the final last July and if the Mallorcan needed any endorsement about his Wimbledon title prospects, Borg was happy to oblige.
"If he survives the first two or three rounds at Wimbledon this year, then I pick Nadal to win Wimbledon," said Borg.
Bureau Report
First Published: Monday, June 09, 2008, 00:00