ROME ā At 37, John Isner is just happy to be back on tour in Europe with his wife and three kids.
No longer dreaming of a Grand Slam title, heās trying to make the back end of his tennis career not seem ālike such a jobā and make it āfun.ā
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Yet thereās serious business coming up Wednesday with a second-round match against 10-time champion Rafael Nadal in the second round at the Italian Open.
And get this: Isner believes he has a chance against the holder of a record 21 Grand Slam titles.
While Isner has only beaten Nadal once in eight previous meetings ā and that lone win came indoors ā the big-serving American pushed Nadal to five sets at the 2011 French Open.
āThis is a very cool opportunity for me,ā Isner said an interview with The Associated Press on Tuesday. āAt 37, I get another crack at one of the all-time greats."
āIn my estimation and I think Rafa would say it, too, heās not playing the best heās ever played,ā Isner added. āHeās been hurt and heās just coming back. So he maybe doesnāt have his full complement of confidence that heās used to. So maybe I can try to take advantage of that.ā
The 6-foot-10 Isner certainly looked confident in a 6-4, 6-3 first-round win over Miami Open semifinalist Francisco Cerundolo.
Nadal, meanwhile is preparing to play his second tournament since returning from a rib stress fracture that kept him out for six weeks. Nadal was beaten by Spanish teenager Carlos Alcaraz in the Madrid Open quarterfinals last week.
In other action on the red clay courts of the Foro Italico, five-time champion Novak Djokovic looked solid in a 6-3, 6-2 win over Aslan Karatsev in his opening match.
Djokovic missed several key tournaments earlier this year because he was not vaccinated against the coronavirus ā which led to him being deported from Australia ahead of the yearās first Grand Slam.
Still seeking his first title of 2022, Djokovic showed off some vintage scrambling abilities late in the first set when he ran down one shot near the net post then sprinted back across the net to dig out a low backhand volley winner.
āYou always hope you can play some exciting and attractive points and come out as a winner of those points and celebrate with the crowd,ā Djokovic said. āThatās what the crowd is looking for ā theyāre looking for energy, excitement, fight and they want to see some good tennis.
āItās always great to play in the colosseum of tennis,ā Djokovic added.
In a womenās matchup of two U.S. Open champions, Bianca Andreescu advanced when Emma Raducanu retired due to a lower back injury with Andreescu ahead 6-2, 2-1.
Isner recently won doubles titles at Indian Wells and Miami with partners Jack Sock and Hubert Hurkacz, respectively.
āIāve been spending a lot of time on the match court and I havenāt been spending much time on the practice court, which is exactly how I would I would want to have it,ā said Isner, who is back in Rome after missing the Italian Open the last two years during the pandemic.
āI like the fact that the match was about an hour and a half today,ā Isner said. āSo I donāt think it took too much out of me.ā
Isner is also playing in an eye-catching doubles partnership in Rome with the diminutive Argentine Diego Schwartzman ā who is 15 inches shorter than him. They won their opening match on Monday.
āDoes make for a good photograph,ā Isner said. āAnd on top of that, I think weāre pretty good.ā
Including Isner, there were eight Americans in the singles draw at the start of the tournament ā matching host Italy for the most players from any country. Jenson Brooksby, Tommy Paul and Marcos Giron also reached the second round.
āAmerican menās tennis, I can truly say right now, is definitely on the upswing,ā Isner said.
So is Isner, still ranked in the top 30, contemplating retirement?
āNo, not right now. But itās certainly weird seeing a lot of my contemporaries retire or about to retire,ā he said, mentioning Jo-Wilfried Tsonga, Kevin Anderson and Juan Martin del Potro ā who have all retired recently or plan to soon.
āIām still ranked relatively high and still seeded at Grand Slams and Iām still hungry,ā Isner added. āSo I want to try to keep it going.ā
Up next for Isner will be his 53rd Grand Slam tournament at the French Open, which starts May 22.
First, though, heāll take his family for a little break on the Spanish island of Mallorca.
āGoing to rent a place on the beach and just enjoy it,ā he said. āI am trying to make it very, very fun and Iām doing that with my family here.ā
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More AP Tennis: https://apnews.com/hub/tennis and https://twitter.com/AP_Sports
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Andrew Dampf on Twitter: www.twitter.com/AndrewDampf