Twenty-two-time Grand Slam winner Rafael Nadal, who retired last November after a Davis Cup tie in Malaga, revealed that he did not miss his time on the court. Nadal was honored on Monday with the prestigious Sporting Icon award at the Laureus World Sports Awards in Madrid.
“The truth is that I don’t miss tennis. Zero. I don’t miss it at all,” Nadal told reporters.
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“But not because I finished tired of tennis or fighting against tennis, not at all. I finished my career happy, and if I could have, I would have carried on, because I loved what I was doing. It was my passion, and that’s been the case all my life.
"It’s just that when you realise that physically you can’t do it any more… you try to close that chapter. And I closed it,” he added.
Rafael Nadal admitted that he sort of dragged his retirement.
Who's that IPL player?
"I delayed making my final decision because I needed time to be sure it was the right one. What would have been hard was sitting on my sofa wondering if I should keep trying to play," he said.
"When I saw that my body wasn’t going to recover to the level I needed to continue enjoying myself on court, then I made the decision to stop.
“That’s why I don’t miss it. Because I finished with the peace of mind of knowing that I’d given it my all, and that my body couldn’t give any more,” Nadal added.
“The truth is that I don’t miss tennis. Zero. I don’t miss it at all,” Nadal told reporters.
Go Beyond The Boundary with our YouTube channel.
“But not because I finished tired of tennis or fighting against tennis, not at all. I finished my career happy, and if I could have, I would have carried on, because I loved what I was doing. It was my passion, and that’s been the case all my life.
"It’s just that when you realise that physically you can’t do it any more… you try to close that chapter. And I closed it,” he added.
Rafael Nadal admitted that he sort of dragged his retirement.
Who's that IPL player?
"I delayed making my final decision because I needed time to be sure it was the right one. What would have been hard was sitting on my sofa wondering if I should keep trying to play," he said.
"When I saw that my body wasn’t going to recover to the level I needed to continue enjoying myself on court, then I made the decision to stop.
“That’s why I don’t miss it. Because I finished with the peace of mind of knowing that I’d given it my all, and that my body couldn’t give any more,” Nadal added.
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