MELBOURNE - A combative Rafa Nadal returned serve at sceptics who
have questioned his motivation at the Australian Open on Sunday, saying
the passion he lost toward the end of last season had returned and that
he was fighting fit to take down 2011 nemesis Novak Djokovic.
Nadal won a sixth French Open title
but endured a disappointing season by his own sky-high standards, losing
his world number one ranking and six consecutive finals to the Serbian.
Nadal, who suffered an early
exit from the season-ending ATP World Tour Finals, admitted to losing
his usual passion amid struggles with a shoulder injury at the end of
the season, but said the media were making too much of it.
"That's nothing crazy," he said.
"That happens when you are a little bit more tired than usual. Maybe
you're not doing your job all the time with the same passion because
you're tired. That's part of the job."
Nadal plays American qualifier
Alex Kuznetsov in the first round on Monday and said he had come to
Australia "with big motivation, with big passion".
"I'm happy. I am practising well. I'm enjoying everything. I will try to be ready for tomorrow."
Rarely one to make bullish
statements about his leadup form into grand slams, Nadal has little
cause to do so this year after bowing out of the Qatar Open with a
surprise semi-final defeat to French world number 15 Gael Monfils.
Some observers say the
25-year-old has been worked out by Djokovic, who has picked apart the
Spaniard's game by pouncing on his serve and relatively weak backhand to
dictate play.
Health most important
Djokovic remains heavy on Nadal's mind and he nominated the Serbian as the man blocking his way to an 11th grand slam crown.
"There are a lot of fantastic
players around," he said. "Novak is the best because last year he had a
fantastic year. He's the No 1 today. He deserves to be there."
Nadal said he had a couple of things he needed to work on but he was happy that he was in good shape physically.
"I am healthy. That's the first
thing, the first important thing. Without that, you cannot think about
other things. I am healthy and I am ready to work hard."
Nadal also indicated on Sunday
he would no longer be taking a public stand in relation to players'
demands over pay and the tennis calendar as he feared being
misunderstood and said his voice would not help to change anything
anyway.
"I'm the one who in the past
talked a lot about the calendar, talked a lot about the Davis Cup,
talked a lot about the problem with the US Open," the world number two
told reporters.
"But at the end of the day I
look like I am the one who is always talking about things that must
change ... I just lose time, energy."



