Rafael Nadal wins in straight sets
NEW YORK -- Rafael Nadal's first match as defending U.S. Open champion was hardly a tour de force.
He would fall behind in a set, then come back. Fall behind, then come back.
His serve was broken six times; that happened a total of five times in seven matches during his 2010 run to the title at Flushing Meadows. His shots didn't have their normal depth. He needed to save seven set points during the second set.
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Novak Djokovic breezed to a win in 44 minutes while Rafael Nadal took nearly three hours to prevail. The end result was the same, writes Greg Garber. Story
Locked in a struggle for nearly three hours, the second-seeded Nadal eventually got past 98th-ranked Andrey Golubev of Kazakhstan 6-3, 7-6 (1), 7-5 on Tuesday night to reach the second round of the U.S. Open.
"Well," Nadal conceded, "I was a little bit lucky to win today in straight sets."
That's for sure. And Nadal expended a lot more energy Tuesday than Novak Djokovic, who overtook the Spaniard at No. 1 in the rankings last month.
Indeed, it didn't take too long to see that Djokovic's right shoulder is feeling fine. He began his first-round match with a 121 mph service winner. Four points later, he closed that game with a 120 mph ace. He whipped forehands exactly where he wanted them. He returned well, too.
Playing his first match since Aug. 21, when he quit because of a sore and tired shoulder, the top-seeded Djokovic began setting aside any questions about his fitness for Flushing Meadows, building a 6-0, 5-1 lead before 197th-ranked qualifier Conor Niland of Ireland stopped after 44 minutes. Niland had food poisoning.
"Great opening performance," Djokovic declared. "Today I didn't feel any pain. I served well, and I played well, so I have no concern."
The 24-year-old Serb improved to 58-2 with nine titles in 2011, including at Wimbledon and the Australian Open. Djokovic is on his way to compiling one of the greatest seasons in tennis history, particularly if he can earn his first championship at the U.S. Open, where in the past four years he's lost twice in the final and twice in the semifinals.

"This year has been tremendous -- best so far in my career -- and there has been a lot of talk about history-making and this incredible run," said Djokovic, who lost to Nadal in last year's U.S. Open final but is 5-0 against him this season.
Nadal didn't enter the year's last Grand Slam tournament under the best of circumstances.
"His confidence is not too good," said Toni Nadal, Rafael's uncle and coach. "I hope in one week, it will be different."
After losing to Djokovic in the Wimbledon final, Nadal lost his first summer hard-court match at Montreal, then bowed out in the quarterfinals at Cincinnati, where he also burned two right fingers on a hot ceramic plate in a restaurant.
"I didn't have the best summer possible for me," said Nadal, whose second-round opponent is Nicolas Mahut, the man who lost the longest match in tennis history, 70-68 in the fifth set, at Wimbledon last year.
Against Golubev, who has a 3-13 career record in Grand Slam matches, Nadal trailed 3-2 in the first set, and 5-2 in each of the others.
"I hit good shots, but not enough," said Nadal, who finished with 18 winners, 23 fewer than Golubev.
There was one especially important point: At 5-all in the second set, Golubev hit a terrific drop shot with Nadal stuck behind the baseline. On a full sprint, Nadal lifted the ball over the net; Golubev flubbed an overhead to lose the point. Golubev thought the ball bounced twice -- which would have meant he won the point -- and argued at length with the chair umpire, but TV replays showed Nadal got there in time.
That gave Nadal a break point, which he converted to lead 6-5. He got broken yet again, but then reeled off the last six points of the tiebreaker.
Golubev served for the second set at 5-3, and for the third set at 5-2 and 5-4. Nadal broke each time.
"If you don't think about the points, it was not bad performance," Golubev said. "I mean, you have to win the points when you have to win -- for example, like second set or third set, when you serve for the set."
Two seeded men lost during the day: No. 16 Mikhail Youzhny was beaten by Ernests Gulbis of Latvia 6-2, 6-4, 6-4, and No. 32 Ivan Dodig was eliminated 6-7 (6), 6-3, 6-0, 2-6, 6-2 by Nikolay Davydenko of Russia, who was a U.S. Open semifinalist in 2006 and 2007 and once was ranked No. 3 but now is 39th.
Winners included No. 5 David Ferrer, No. 11 Jo-Wilfried Tsonga, No. 17 Jurgen Melzer and Americans James Blake and Donald Young.
Information from The Associated Press was used in this report.
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Day 15
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• Djokovic beats Nadal to win U.S. Open
• Howard: Rafa good, Djoker better
• Garber: Djoker backs up No. 1 ranking
• Garber: The game that crushed Nadal
• Bodo: Djokovic, Stosur did it their way
• Serena Williams fined $2,000 for outburst
• Howard: Right call on Serena's fine
• SportsNation: Fine fit the crime?
• Grantland: Phillips on Federer-Djokovic
• Grantland: Baker on U.S. Open
• Chris Evert on Serena Williams' fine
• Highlight: Djokovic wins U.S. Open
• Analysis: Dominant Novak Djokovic
• Winners and losers from U.S. Open
Day 14
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• Garber: Serena loses cool, then match
• Bernstein: Match of life for Stosur
• espnW: Final step in Serena's comeback
• McManus: Time is now to appreciate Serena
• Howard: The growing aura of Novak Djokovic
• Hot Button: Who will win the men's final?
• Digital Serve: What can Stosur do?
• Open Update: Djoker and Rafa at it again
• End of the Roger Federer era?
• Analysis: What happened to Serena?
• Highlight: Stosur beats Serena
• What do we make of the outburst?
Day 13
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• Recap: Djokovic beats Federer in five sets
• Garber: That Serena can pack a punch
• Garber: Federer, again, can't close the deal
• McManus: Rafa gets much-needed day off
• espnW: Don't discount Stosur
• Analysis: What happened to Federer?
• Highlight: Stunning comeback by Djoker
Day 12
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• Recap: Nadal, Murray reach semifinals
• Howard: For Djokovic, mind over matter
• Garber: Nadal foils Roddick's final four hopes
• McManus: Disappointed Izzy falls to Murray
• Timeline: Serena's Grand Slam career
• Garber: Players remember events of Sept. 11
• Howard: The last normal Sunday in NYC
• espnW: The anticipated showdown
• Phillips on the problem with Djokovic
• Would anyone root for the underdog?
• David Foster Wallace's classic Federer profile.
• Nadal crushes Roddick in three
• Murray thwarts Isner
• Digital Serve: Men's semifinal preview
• Women's semifinal preview
• Michelle Obama visits the U.S. Open
Day 11
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• Recaps: Men | Women
• Garber: Federer beats elements, then Tsonga
• Bernstein: Woz sets up showdown with Serena
• Howard: Players ace USTA over schedule shift
• McManus: Andy Roddick revisits his roots
• Bernstein: Serena raises level when it counts
• Garber: Happier days for Nadal, Murray
• Roddick-Ferrer moves to tiny Court 13
• Howard: The tangled web atop men's tennis
• Bernstein: Teenage dreams deferred
• Tandon: Why tennis and fashion mix
• Player safety debate
• Nadal, Murray on to quarters
• Serena sails into semifinals
• Roddick upset with court
• Schedule irritates Nadal
• Djokovic beats countryman
• Digital Serve: How will Rafa, Murray fare?
• Who will win Woz versus Serena?
• Johnette Howard on weather delays
• Federer beats down Tsonga
Day 10
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• Garber: Players prepare for a daunting grind
• Garber: Perilous conditions stirs controversy
• Howard: Fed deficit? Not in confidence
• Bernstein: Wozniacki stays positive
• Vote: Who has the best wet-court game?
• Kerber, Pennetta vying for spot in semis
• Roddick on unplayable conditions
• Nadal not happy with courts
• Serena tired of waiting
Day 9
Day 8
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• Recaps: Men | Women
• espnW: Wozniacki shows fight
• Garber: Thought-free Tsonga consumes Fish
• Garber: The physical hardships of Nadal
• Garber: Djokovic survives early scare
• espnW: Serena making it look too easy
• MacGregor: Fed's grace amid the volatility
• Serena takes care of Ivanovic
• Djokovic moves on to quarterfinals
• Tsonga beats Fish in five
• Digital Serve: Day 9 preview
• Open Update: Roddick versus Ferrer
• Wozniacki holds off Kuznetsova
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