SUBSCRIBE NOW

A FINE BROMANCE: Great friends Nadal, Federer share epic rivalry

Roger Federer fetes his greatest rival, Rafael Nadal, following his announcement that he will be formally retiring from professional tennis.
Roger Federer fetes his greatest rival, Rafael Nadal, following his announcement that he will be formally retiring from professional tennis.GLYN KIRK/AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE
Published on

MALAGA, Spain (AFP) — Rafael Nadal and Roger Federer’s rivalry started in the sweltering heat of Miami and ended almost two decades later in tears and hand-holding in an emotional London farewell.

In between, the great friends met 40 times, battling out epics on European clay, London grass and hard courts from the United States to Australia.

“What a career, Rafa! I always hoped this day would never come,” said 20-time Grand Slam winner Federer in a post on social media after news of Nadal’s retirement broke.

“Thank you for the unforgettable memories and all your incredible achievements in the game we love. It’s been an absolute honor!”

Nadal edged their head-to-head count 24-16, coming out 6-3 on top in Grand Slam finals including his stunning Wimbledon triumph in 2008, widely regarded as one of the greatest finals at the majors.

However, the statistics only scratch the surface.

“When Roger leaves the tour, an important part of my life is leaving, too,” admitted a tearful Nadal as he played Laver Cup doubles alongside 41-year-old Federer in the Swiss star’s final appearance in September 2022.

The two clasped hands as Federer hobbled into retirement.

“Very proud to be part of his career but even for me happier to finish our career as friends after everything we shared on court as rivals,” Nadal said.

When Nadal tied Federer’s haul of 20 Grand Slam titles by lifting his 13th French Open in 2020, the Swiss described it as the “greatest achievement in sport.”

Federer never begrudged Nadal moving past him to 22 majors.

“I can call up Rafa and talk about anything,” said Federer at his emotional farewell in London.

“We enjoy each other’s company. We have a million topics to cover. I always feel like any evening we ever spent together we never have enough time.”

Twenty years ago, it was another time, another place.

The only thing they had in common then was respect.

When they met for the first time in March 2004 at Miami, Nadal was just 17 and ranked at 34.

Federer was the world No. 1 and had already captured the Australian Open and Indian Wells titles that year.

However, a fearless Nadal swept to a 6-3, 6-3 victory in 70 minutes.

“I was very worried about him beating me 6-1, 6-1 or 6-1, 6-2, but I really wanted to play this match against the world number one,” Nadal said.

Nadal fretted if his friends back home could follow the match “on Teletext” while Federer correctly predicted more meetings to come.

“I was impressed with what I saw,” Federer said.

The pair met at least once every year from 2004 until 2015 while Federer would go on to claim seven of their Last Eight clashes.

Fittingly, they split their last meetings in 2019 — Nadal breezing to a semi-final triumph at the French Open with Federer coming out on top in the last four at Wimbledon just weeks later.

Latest Stories

No stories found.
logo
Daily Tribune
tribune.net.ph