
Rafael Nadal's career has always been defined by resilience as much as brilliance.
The King of clay looked back at his record and felt proud after all the setbacks he experienced.
Across two decades on the Tour, the Spaniard rewrote history at Roland Garros, having won untouchable 14 titles from 19 trips to the French capital. The overall score at his beloved tournament? 112-4!
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He also turned Barcelona Open into another personal stronghold, dominating at the event where he trained as a kid and lifting the trophy 12 times. With Barcelona and Monte Carlo, Nadal cemented his dominance on clay beyond Paris.
What makes his journey even more remarkable is the consistency he maintained despite constant physical setbacks. They followed him through the entire career, but the warrior in him refused to surrender and quit earlier than he wanted.
Despite missing months of competition due to various issues, Nadal maintained a spot in the top-10 between 2005 and 2024, collecting remarkable 912 straight weeks in the elite and earning a record that will take some beating.
While not knowing the exact number, Rafa is proud of that achievement - it stands as a testament to discipline, adaptability and relentless competitiveness that distanced him from other champions.
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For the 22-time Major winner, these milestones are more than numbers. They are about the ultimate endurance and resilience. He survived pain and returned stronger many times.
In addition, Nadal sustained excellence year after year and shaped a career that stands as one of the most demanding and rewarding journeys the sport has ever seen.
Rafa claimed two Major titles in the first half of 2022 and missed a chance to become world no. 1 at 36, again due to injuries. He suffered a severe left hip injury in Melbourne in January 2023.
It kept him away from the court for a year. The ultimate champion returned to action in 2024. However, he failed to raise his level, with his body refusing to endure the efforts.
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Nadal ended his career at last year's Davis Cup Finals, walking into retirement and focusing on his family.
"I have had a very long career, and I have been very happy. Obviously, some results are hard to imagine and explain. For me, they still are. I do not think about it often, but when I tell myself I have won Roland Garros 14 times, it's something very complicated.
There are also my 12 titles in Barcelona, and I do not know how many consecutive top-10 weeks I have had despite so many injuries and months off. It's a record I'm satisfied with - it testifies to my perseverance and consistency. It was worth it," Rafael Nadal said.