King of Clay — 14-time French Open champion and holder of a record 22 Grand Slams, one of the greatest athletes of any sport.
Rafael Nadal Parera was born in Manacor, Mallorca in 1986, nephew of professional footballer Miguel Ángel Nadal, and became the greatest clay-court player in tennis history and the holder of 22 Grand Slam singles titles. He turned professional at 15 and retired in November 2024. He won the French Open 14 times — a record that may never be approached — plus the Australian Open (2), Wimbledon (2) and US Open (4). He won 92 ATP titles with a career record of 1,082 wins and 225 losses — a win rate of 82.8%. He held the world number one ranking for 209 weeks. He served 4,854 career aces. His 2008 Wimbledon final against Roger Federer — won 9-7 in the fifth set in fading light — is widely considered the greatest tennis match ever played. He won Olympic gold in singles in Beijing 2008 and in doubles in 2016. His topspin forehand — generating 3,200 rpm, the heaviest in professional tennis — combined with extraordinary defensive retrieval and mental toughness made him uniquely difficult to beat in five-set matches. He played through a serious foot condition — Müller-Weiss syndrome — for much of his later career, requiring multiple surgeries. His career record against Federer (24-16) and Djokovic (29-28) across the three-way rivalry defines the greatest era in men's tennis history.
French Open 2005–08, 2010–14, 2017–20, 2022 (14 titles — all-time record)
His 96.5% win rate at Roland Garros (112 wins, 4 losses) is the most dominant record at any single major in tennis history.
Did You Know?Career Honours
- French Open 2005–08, 2010–14, 2017–20, 2022 (14 titles — all-time record)
- US Open 2010, 2013, 2017, 2019
- Wimbledon 2008, 2010
- Australian Open 2009, 2022
- Olympic Gold 2008 (Singles), 2016 (Doubles)
- Davis Cup 5x (Spain)
- ATP World Tour Finals 2010