
Suffering was less than my passion for tennis, says Nadal
Suffering was less than my passion for tennis, says Nadal Figure caption, 'I was playing with a chronic injury'ByCiaran VarleyBBC Sport JournalistPublished1 hour agoRafael Nadal had one of the greatest tennis careers...
A significant story is unfolding on the international scene. Suffering was less than my passion for tennis, says Nadal Figure caption, 'I was playing with a chronic injury'ByCiaran VarleyBBC Sport JournalistPublished1 hour agoRafael Nadal had one of the greatest tennis careers the game has ever seen. He also spent nearly all of it in pain. Between his first French Open win in 2005 and retirement in 2024, the Spaniard won 22 Grand Slam singles titles - the second-highest total of any man.
He was part of the 'Big Three' era, where he, Roger Federer and Novak Djokovic carved up the sport's biggest prizes and thrilled fans. But a chronic foot injury meant Nadal had to find different ways just to get through matches, let alone win them. In a new Netflix series, the 39-year-old opens up about the risks he took with his health in order to achieve greatness.
The Details
"I've had to make decisions about my health, where you are on the borderline between right or wrong," Nadal said. "But if I hadn't explored all that, I probably would have had 10 fewer Grand Slams. I'm not saying one or two, I'm saying 10 or 12.
"In 2005 the long-haired, muscular teenage sensation announced himself to the world by winning the French Open at his first attempt, beating world number one Roger Federer in the semi-finals on his 19th birthday. He finished that season ranked second in the world, having won 11 singles titles. However, it was also the year Nadal's injury struggle began in earnest.
After breaking his left foot during his Madrid Open final victory, Nadal was diagnosed with a rare degenerative condition called Mueller-Weiss syndrome. , externalSpeaking to the World Service's Sporting Witness programme, Nadal said the foot injury was "the origin of all my problems". "I had to stay over-positive, over-determined, always ready to try to find a solution to keep being competitive and find a way to be on court again," he said.
What Experts Say
"I went through, a couple of times in my career, a long process of injuries, but I think I was ready to accept that moment, to tolerate the frustration and to keep working with hope and passion. "The key was the suffering was less than than my passion and my happiness for what I was doing. "Hampered Sinner out in second round in seismic shock Published20 hours agoSporting Witness: When Rafael Nadal won Wimbledon Dr Ernesto Maceira, a specialist who treated the Spaniard's foot, said the condition was caused by "abnormal forces that act on an immature bone" and attributed it to Nadal's intense training as a child.
There were fears he would never play tennis again but, on the suggestion of Maceira, Nadal used a specialist insole to continue competing. But it meant he lived in constant pain. "Tennis became a race against time," said Nadal.
"Always having the doubt in my head of, 'how long can I last with this foot? ' I never knew how long my career would last. "I always thought, 'maybe it's the last year, so there's no time to stop'.
The development has drawn wide international attention, with diplomatic circles watching closely.





