On Wednesday afternoon in Madrid, 19-year-old Rafael Jodar found out for the first time what it’s like to play the No. 1 player in the world. His reaction to a lost point in the second set told us all we needed to know about how it felt.
Jodar’s opponent, Jannik Sinner, the aforementioned No. 1 player, was serving at 3-4 in the second set. In this service game and the one before, he had saved a total of four break points. Each time Jodar had forced him onto the defensive, and each time Sinner had come up with a shot that was more calmly clutch than the last. He hit a forehand winner, a lob winner, and two more forehand winners. But Jodar kept knocking at the door, kept firing 90-m.p.h. missiles, and earned a fifth chance to break.
This time Sinner took the rally into his own hands with a drop shot. Jodar, rangy and deceptively fast for someone 6-foot-3, reached it in time to slide a backhand slice crosscourt. Sinner, with little time to react, angled a backhand behind Jodar that briefly looked as if it would fly wide. But it didn’t fly wide. It landed right on the sideline. All Jodar could do was stare, and slowly raise his hand to his forehead, in disbelief. It would be his last break point. He had knocked as hard as he could on the door, but Sinner wouldn’t let him in.
