Tennis-Nadal opens up about painful battle with career-threatening foot injury


FILE PHOTO: Tennis - French Open - Roland Garros, Paris, France - May 25, 2025 Former tennis player and record French Open winner Rafael Nadal during a tribute REUTERS/Gonzalo Fuentes/ File Photo

May 29 (Reuters) - Rafael Nadal, winner of ⁠22 Grand Slams and one of the 'Big Three' along with Roger Federer and ⁠Novak Djokovic who ruled tennis for two decades, spent most of his ‌career in pain as he willed himself to play through a chronic foot injury.

The Spaniard, who retired in 2024, said he took immense risks with his health to keep his tennis career going, after a Netflix series ​called 'Rafa' provided an in-depth look into his physical and mental ⁠struggles to pursue greatness.

"I've had to ⁠make decisions about my health, where you are on the borderline between right or wrong. ⁠But ‌if I hadn't explored all that, I probably would have had 10 fewer Grand Slams... this is the reality," Nadal told the BBC in an interview published ⁠on Friday.

Nadal was diagnosed with a rare condition called Mueller-Weiss ​syndrome after he broke his ‌foot during the Madrid Open final of 2005, months after he won the ⁠French Open on ​his first attempt aged 19, clinching his first Grand Slam title.

Although the condition, which was caused by his extensive training as a child under his uncle Toni, put his career at risk, Nadal refused ⁠to give up.

The injury haunted him even as he ​won 13 more Grand Slams in the next nine years, clinching at least one major every year.

"Tennis became a race against time. 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," Nadal said.

"I always thought, maybe it's the last year, so there's no time to stop."

The injury also led to other health complications, including tendinitis in his left knee and perforations ​in his intestines, the latter caused by the use of ⁠painkillers.

Sometimes he had to manage the pain with targeted anaesthetic injections, and had no feeling in ​his leg during the final of the 2022 French ‌Open, his last Grand Slam win.

"The key was ​the suffering was less than my passion and my happiness for what I was doing," the 39-year-old said.

(Reporting by Chiranjit Ojha in Bengaluru; Editing by Ken Ferris)

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