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Rafael Nadal has won more titles on clay than any other man and his unparalleled dominance on the surface has earned him the ‘King of Clay’ title.

There are 10 men who have won 20 or more titles on clay courts in the Open Era, with Novak Djokovic becoming the latest to join this list after his 2024 Paris Olympics victory.

Here, we look at the 10 players with the most ATP singles titles on clay-courts.

=9. Novak Djokovic – 20

Novak Djokovic has secured 20 of his 99 titles on clay, with his first tournament win coming on clay at the 2006 Dutch Open, while his most recent was at the 2024 Paris Olympics.

As well as his gold medal, the Serbian’s clay titles include three French Opens, 11 Masters 1000 events and five ATP 250 tournaments.

 

Rafael Nadal

=9. Mats Wilander – 20

Mats Wilander won the first of his 33 career titles at the 1982 French Open, while his 20th and last clay-court triumph was at the 1988 Palermo Open.

The Swede’s most significant clay-court titles include three Roland Garros crowns, two Monte Carlo titles and a victory in Rome.

8. Jose Luis Clerc – 21

Jose Luis Clerc secured 21 of his 35 ATP titles on clay, including his first at the 1978 Florence Open and his last in Washington in 1983.

The Argentine’s biggest clay-court title came at the 1981 Italian Open, where he defeated Victor Pecci in the final.

7.  Ivan Lendl – 28

Ivan Lendl collected 28 of his 94 career singles titles at clay-court events, including his first in Houston in 1980 and his penultimate title in Munich in 1993.

The Czech-American is a three-time French Open champion, while he also won big clay titles in Rome (twice), Monte Carlo, Hamburg and Forest Hills.

6. Ilie Nastase – 31

Ilie Nastase won the first of his 64 singles titles on clay at the 1968 Colombia International in Barranquilla, while his 31st and final clay-court victory was at the 1977 Aix-en-Provence Open.

The Romanian claimed his second and last Grand Slam title at Roland Garros in 1973, while he also won sizeable clay events in Rome and Barcelona.

=4. Bjorn Borg – 32

Bjorn Borg secured the first of his 32 titles on clay courts at the 1974 Italian Open, while his 66th and last career title was on clay at the 1981 Geneva Open.

The Swede won six French Open titles and was also a three-time winner in Monte Carlo and a two-time Italian Open champion.

=4 Manuel Orantes – 32

Manuel Orantes claimed 32 of his 34 ATP titles at clay-court tournaments, with his maiden clay triumph at the 1969 Barcelona Open and his last coming in Bournemouth in 1982.

The Spaniard’s career highlight is beating Jimmy Connors in the final of the 1975 US Open, when the Grand Slam was played on green clay at Forest Hills.

3. Thomas Muster – 40

Thomas Muster won the first of his 44 titles on clay at the 1986 Dutch Open, while his 40th and final clay-court tournament win was in Bogota in 1996.

The Austrian was a French Open champion in 1995 and also secured six Masters series crowns on clay — three in both Monte Carlo and Rome.

2. Guillermo Vilas – 49

Guillermo Vilas earned 49 of his 62 ATP titles at clay-court events, including his first at the 1973 Argentina Open and his last in Kitzbuhel in 1983.

The Argentine won both the French Open and the US Open in 1977 (the last year in which the latter was played on clay) and was also an Italian Open champion.

1. Rafael Nadal – 63

Nadal has secured 63 of his 92 singles titles to date on clay, including his maiden title in Warsaw in 2004 and his most recent at the 2022 French Open.

The Spaniard has won the most titles at Roland Garros (14), the Barcelona Open (12), the Monte Carlo Masters (11) and the Italian Open (10), and has also won a record four Madrid Open titles since the event switched to clay.

Nadal reacts to Alcaraz falling short versus Djokovic in the Paris Olympics final.

Rafael Nadal offered some encouraging words to Carlos Alcaraz after the 21-year-old’s painful Paris Olympics final loss to Novak Djokovic as the 22-time Grand Slam champion told Alcaraz he knew what he was going through but also highlighted that any Olympic medal is a big thing.

After dominating Djokovic in the Wimbledon final for a second consecutive year and improving to four Grand Slam titles, Alcaraz was hoping he would beat the Serb again and also become an Olympic champion. And even though Alcaraz played at a very high level throughout the final, 37-year-old Djokovic used all of his experience to find a way to be a bit better and clinch a tight 7-6 (3) 7-6 (2) win.

Moments after the final was over, world No. 3 Alcaraz burst into tears and it wasn’t hard to see how heartbroken and devastated he was over the loss.

“Carlos, although I know that today is a difficult day, value a medal that is very important for the entire country and you will see, over time, that it is for you too,” Nadal said in a message posted on his Instagram Story after the final.

Nadal, who Alcaraz once idolized and looked up to, won the gold medal at the 2008 Beijing Olympics and also won the main glory with Marc Lopez in the doubles competition at the 2016 Rio Olympics.

Alcaraz’s candid confession after the Olympics final

Whenever Alcaraz was asked about his hopes and expectations for his Olympic debut, he wasn’t hiding that he was feeling extremely confident about his recent form and that the goal was one and clear – winning gold. And after booking a final meeting with Djokovic, the 21-year-old Spaniard made it clear that he wanted the win but that he was also determined to make the Spanish people proud.

But after falling short in the final and crying afterward, Alcaraz admitted that he was feeling major pressure in the final and that he got emotional because he felt that he let down his people in some ways.

“I think I put more pressure on myself because I was playing for Spain, for the Spaniards. I felt that I let the Spanish people down by not winning the gold,” Alcaraz said.

“It was a different type of pressure. Everyone in Spain wanted me to win the gold, and I wanted to win the gold as well. In those difficult moments I usually raise my level, but I wasn’t able to do that today. Probably I felt the pressure in those situations. You play four Grand Slams every year, the Olympics is only once every four years.”

Rafael Nadal and Novak Djokovic.

What Alcaraz said about Djokovic’s performance?

Alcaraz may have been extremely disappointed about failing to get the job done against Djokovic but that didn’t stop him from giving where credit is due and acknowledging that the Serb deserved to become an Olympic champion. Also, the 21-year-old vowed to return stronger and give his best to land a gold medal in the future.

“It’s very painful to lose this match the way I did. I feel like I had a few chances, but you can’t let a player like Djokovic slip away. The truth is that he deserves this success, he played amazingly,” Alcaraz said.

“Right now I’m a little disappointed, above all, because I feel like I’ve let down a lot of people who expected me to win Olympic gold. I can only say that I’m leaving here with my head held high because I’ve given everything I had and I hope to win gold sometime in my career.”

Meanwhile, Djokovic couldn’t hide his happiness and he wasn’t hiding how much it meant to him and how he felt after becoming an Olympic champion.

In the last couple of years, Djokovic highlighted several times that winning a gold medal was his major wish and he made it clear earlier this year that it was his biggest goal for the remainder of his career.

And now, Djokovic is a record 24-time Grand Slam champion – has spent the most weeks at No. 1 in tennis history – and he also has an Olympic gold medal.

“This is probably the biggest sporting success I have ever had and the most special feeling. I thought carrying the flag at the opening ceremony for my country at the 2012 Olympics was the best feeling an athlete could have until today,” Djokovic said.

“Now at the age of 37 and facing a 21-year-old who is probably the best player in the world right now, winning Roland Garros and Wimbledon back-to-back, I can say that this is probably the biggest sporting success I have ever had.”

Tuesday morning saw an Olympics landmark for the ages, at least for all the tennis nuts among the audience: the 60th matchup between Rafael Nadal and Novak Djokovic, two legends and longtime nemeses facing off on the Olympic stage yet again. Maybe we were watching Nadal for the last time ever, some fans wondered, though Nadal himself scoffed at the prospect at a press conference: “Who said it was last dance?”

The faceoff went about as expected, with the top-ranked, slightly younger Serbian earning a decisive victory over his Spanish rival, making the pair’s total head-to-head record 31–29 in Djokovic’s favor. Still, Nadal played a valiant second set, making Djokovic hustle for his win and keeping the score close enough that the final result, at least for a bit, did not appear a foregone conclusion. And Nadal still had a few more games in Paris left, advancing with fellow Spaniard and burgeoning star Carlos Alcaraz up through the Men’s Doubles quarterfinals on Wednesday … in which they lost to Rajeev Ram and Austin Krajicek of Team USA, ending Nadal’s competitive chances in Paris 2024 and, likely, his Olympic career. At the very Games where he bore the torch, no less.

It was a tearful moment for fans of Rafa, who packed the seats at Stade Roland Garros for their hero’s comeback tour—he’s the French Open record-holder, the all-time king of clay, after all—and spiritedly booed both Djokovic and Nadalcaraz’s formidable doubles opponents. Nadal took a moment, himself, to linger on the court after his doubles downfall and wave at the adoring crowd, in an arena where he’d dominated so many times before, though he just couldn’t pull it off here.

The question that continues to hound Nadal since he bore the torch is whether this, indeed, is his last dance. Following the Djoko loss, Nadal seemed a bit irritated when the Spanish sports show Carrusel Deportivo asked him whether this defeat would be “key in terms of how long you will continue playing,” replying somewhat brusquely in his mother tongue:

Honestly, when I know when I’m going to retire, I’ll tell you. Every day I come here to answer whether it’s my last game or not. I can’t spend every day analyzing whether it could be my last game or not. What can I say? It’s not easy to play in this situation. I try to play, look ahead, and when I’m done here, it will be decided what I really want to do. In some way I’ve earned the right to say it and finish the way I want. When the time comes, I’ll let you know. In the end, I try to do my best. I’ve given myself some time after two difficult years, with many problems, and I’ve given myself that time to see if I’m capable of improving. If I’m not capable, I’ll make decisions. But I can’t live with this every day, answering every day whether I’m going to retire or not. It seems like every day you want to retire me. Give me a little more time.

One could view this as a statement of defiance from a veteran with nothing left to prove, a former world No. 1 in his sport and the winner of two Olympic gold medals for his home country. Yet it also came off, in the moment, as something deeply sad—a plea, almost, for the viewers to stop undercutting him so publicly, at this point in his decadeslong professional career, at a moment of recovery and reemergence.

After the doubles loss, Rafa admitted that “this was not the end we wished for.” He added that his “most important goal” for the year had been to get just one more gold for Spain, and that in the wake of the clearly deflating setback, he was going to think things over—although he was hardly committing to retirement. “My next step is to go home, spend time with family, disconnect for months,” he told Spanish media. “It’s exciting that I have returned to playing tennis, but it’s also hard because I have gone through many, many difficult moments, disappointments, but also beautiful moments.”

Rafael Nadal

2024 certainly hasn’t been Nadal’s best year. This was just one more round on his comeback tour, following a yearslong spate of routs in the Grand Slams—the Australian Open, French Open, Wimbledon, and U.S. Open—and physical injuries that kept hobbling his performance and forced him to withdraw from various events last year, causing his ranking to plummet within the Association of Tennis Professionals. As this year’s season took off, he faced even more defeats and injuries—at the Brisbane International, at the first round of the French Open, and even at the inaugural “Netflix Slam,” which offered a real nail-biter against none other than Alcaraz.

But the spirit and excitement of Nadal’s play, the passion he always brings to tennis, couldn’t keep him down for long. He made the final at the Swedish Open, and brought on a solid couple Olympics matches as doubles partner with Alcaraz. The volleys, the slices, the sprints across the clay, the fortitude of a long-running match—it was all there as Nadalcaraz respectively faced off against the Argentine and Dutch doubles pairs, locking their opponents into endless back-and-forths, into the closest set scores and ties possible, exuding a thrilling on-court presence. The Spanish duo’s highlights against the Netherlands’ Tallon Griekspoor and Wesley Koolhof are testament. Rafa asserts his control at both the net and the back court, countering his opponents’ hits with ease, whimsy, and grace. At his best, as ever, he does not resemble a player who’s been struggling to match his former glory.

Watching great athletes age is always hard. Especially ones like Nadal, whose power and vitality were some of his defining qualities, and who was once himself the troublemaking youthful upstart supplanting gods like Roger Federer. To see him struggle in these public venues, even on his career’s holy ground of Roland Garros, perceptive enough to realize what he still has left yet well aware of what he’s now unable to do, is a painful reckoning to witness. It feels cruel, and maybe the cruelest thing is that it’s only the natural way of things, where all great athletes and fans alike end up: older, frailer, less able to compete with the younger generation.

Nadal is older now, many more injuries deep into his career, in professed need of more rest time between matches, and outflanked by younger players who bring a different energy to bear than the Big Three—Rafa, Federer, Djokovic—that defined so much of tennis this century. Alcaraz is a leader in the changing of the guard that’s already begun; after this disappointment, maybe Nadal will be content to rest on his unbelievable laurels, with records and streaks at countless tennis spaces that remain daunting accomplishments. No matter what he does next, he has a legacy that’s earned him widespread adoration and the unbound respect of his most fervent opponents. It’s a melancholy time to be a Nadal fan. But make sure you roll back the tapes, because you can’t fully count him out just yet.

An irritated Rafael Nadal baulked at the idea of retirement following an Olympics demolition at the hands of Novak Djokovic.

The Spaniard suffered one of the most lopsided defeats of his career, falling to 24-time Grand Slam champion Djokovic, 6-1 6-4, in the second round of the men’s Olympics singles in Paris.

Two-time Olympic gold medallist Nadal was blown off court by his longtime rival in what was their 60th career head-to-head, which is a record showdown in the men’s game.

The 38-year-old Nadal, who is still in doubles with compatriot Carlos Alcaraz, has played only a handful of tournaments over the past two years because of injury.

He’s aware the end is coming but isn’t ready to call time on his playing days just yet, and appeared annoyed at the suggestion his illustrious career is waning.

“You want me to retire every day guys, you ask me for that,” he said with a touch of irritation after the defeat. “I am trying to do my best. I cannot live every single day with the feeling that it’s going to be or not going to be my last match.

“I have been suffering a lot of injuries the last two years. So, if I feel that I am not competitive enough to keep going, or physically I’m not ready to keep going, I will stop and I will let you know.

“I like what I do and of course I’m going to miss the adrenaline of playing but I cannot complain. I have been playing in all these courts for 20 years, fighting for the most important things. I achieved much more than I dreamed of.

“If that’s the last match here, I’ll be in peace. I did my best and I can’t complain anymore.”

Serbian Djokovic was in imperious form against Nadal, handing the 14-time French Open champion just his fifth defeat at Roland Garros in 118 matches.

The right knee that he had surgery on following a slip during the French Open was still strapped up but for a set and a half Djokovic had no more trouble swatting aside Nadal than he had his first-round opponent Matt Ebden, a doubles specialist who had not played a singles match for two years.

Rafael Nadal

Djokovic was sharper, faster and more accurate but a loss of concentration when his position appeared unassailable allowed Nadal back in, and the Spaniard delighted his fans by winning four games in a row, the last one sealed when he drilled a smash back at his opponent’s feet before passing him.

But Djokovic immediately broke serve again, earning loud boos for cupping his ear to the pro-Nadal crowd, and then clinched the victory with an ace.

“He played much better than me from the beginning until the end. I had some reaction, some points. But that was, of course, not enough.”

Djokovic, who will next take on Germany’s Dominik Koepfer, now leads the rivalry 31-29, and is hoping there are a few more chapters still to write in his storied rivalry with Rafa.

“I just hope, for the sake of our rivalry and the sport in general, that we’ll get to face each other once or maybe a few times on different surfaces, in different parts of the world, because I feel like it can only benefit the sport,” he said.

Men’s doubles second round action at the Paris Olympics features top singles players like Gael Monfils and the Rafael Nadal/Carlos Alcaraz pairing in action, Team USA features Rajeev Ram as the clay court doubles in Paris continues on.

Carlos Alcaraz/Rafael Nadal vs Tallon Griekspoor/Wesley Koolhof

Damian Kust: Alcaraz took a bit of time to catch up with Nadal in their opening round, but towards the end of their match the youngster was executing some really good reflex combinations on top of the net. This might help them out as Nadal was pretty fabulous in that one from the get-go and bothered Gonzalez/Molteni so much with his lefty spins. It’s not obvious they’ll get this one as well, but they’re the favorites. Alcaraz/Nadal in 2

Jordan Reynolds: The manner of Nadal’s defeat to Novak Djokovic proved he is still nowhere near his best in singles. However, he was outstanding in his opening doubles match, and actually outperformed Alcaraz throughout it. Koolhof is a great doubles player, but the Spanish pair will probably prove to be too formidable. Nadal/Alcaraz in 2

Rafael Nadal and Novak Djokovic square off in an Olympic Games blockbuster on Monday, their first meeting in over two years, while Iga Swiatek stepped up her quest for gold by powering into the third round.

The latest chapter of a generation-defining rivalry, and perhaps the final act, will bring Nadal and Djokovic full circle — the duo having met as teenagers in their very first meeting in the 2006 Roland Garros quarter-finals.

This is the earliest stage of a tournament the pair have ever met, with Nadal far from the almost invincible player who dominated on clay for well over a decade.

The 38-year-old — who has won 14 of his 22 Grand Slam titles at the French Open — believes old rival Djokovic will be favourite when they meet for the 60th time.

“Situations are completely different for him, for me. He’s being very competitive. I was not being very competitive for the last two years, so in that case, I think probably he is the clear favourite,” said Nadal, who holds an 8-2 head-to-head advantage over the Serb at Roland Garros.

“I’m going to try my best to bring the best to the court and then let’s see how far I can go and how many problems I can create for him.”

Djokovic, chasing a first Olympic gold to add to his 24 Grand Slams, expects the clash to deliver.

“We’ll spread some fireworks on the court, like the good old times,” said Djokovic, who has also yet to win a title this season.

“Playing him is like finals for me. His record at Roland Garros speaks for itself.”

Four-time French Open champion Swiatek underlined her status at the heavy favourite for women’s gold in Paris, swatting home hope Diane Parry aside 6-1, 6-1.

Swiatek, who lost in the second round in Tokyo, meets China’s Wang Xiyu for a place in the quarter-finals.

World number one Swiatek has won her last 23 matches at Roland Garros, with three clay titles already under her belt this season.

The Pole, tested in her opening match under the roof on Court Philippe Chatrier, enjoyed a far more straightforward outing in bright sunshine on Monday.

Swiatek won the first five games of the match and broke five times as she strolled to victory in just 74 minutes.

US second seed Coco Gauff plays Argentina’s Maria Lourdes Carle later.

Reigning men’s French Open and Wimbledon champion Carlos Alcaraz takes on Dutchman Tallon Griekspoor in the evening.

Scorching heat posed a considerable problem for tennis players at the Tokyo Olympic, and the issue could resurface this week with highs of 35 degrees Celsius expected on Tuesday.

Rafael Nadal has shown Emma Raducanu exactly how you pull out of a doubles event. The Spaniard was competing alongside Casper Ruud as they reached the semi-finals of the Swedish Open.

But Nadal withdrew from their final four showdown just hours before the match was due to take place.

Earlier in the day, the 38-year-old came from a set down to beat Duje Ajdukovic to reach the singles final in Bastad.

So he openly and honestly admitted that he was withdrawing from the doubles to preserve his fitness after a torrid time with injuries recently.

That’s fair enough, nobody can begrudge Nadal the chance to compete for an ATP singles title in his first tournament back, especially when he was so up front with his excuse.

Raducanu could learn a thing from the legendary 22-time Grand Slam winner.

She also withdrew from the Wimbledon mixed doubles event with Andy Murray just hours before their match.

But Raducanu claimed she woke up with a “stiff wrist” the morning after beating No.9 seed Maria Sakkari in the third round of the singles.

In reality, she probably did not expect to beat the Greek star and progress to the second week.

Her excuse of an ‘injury’ rightly riled Andy Murray’s mum Judy, who wrote on social media that she was “astonished.”

Even more surprisingly, Raducanu’s wrist was back to normal the following day when she lost to Lulu Sun in three sets.

The backlash wouldn’t have been as harsh if Raducanu had just been upfront in the first place.

Rafael Nadal will head into the Paris Olympics chasing a third gold medal but admitted his “level was so far from what it should be” after losing in the Bastad final on Sunday.

Paris Olympics Complete Coverage: Click here for news, schedule, explainers and more

The 38-year-old legend went down in straight sets to Portuguese journeyman Nuno Borges in his first final since capturing a 14th French Open title in 2022.

“The level was so far from what it should be. Probably the energy too,” said Nadal.

“It has been a long week with long matches. Even if my body, I don’t have damage, that’s important — but mentally and physically, I am not used to playing four days in a row and playing long matches.”

Nadal was playing his first tournament since suffering an opening round exit at the French Open in May.

He skipped Wimbledon, played on grass, to maintain focus on his clay-court bag of tricks ahead of the Olympics which are being played at Roland Garros, the site of 14 of his 22 Grand Slam triumphs.

At the Games, Nadal will be keen on adding to his singles gold from the 2008 Olympics in Beijing and doubles victory at Rio in 2016.

As well as singles, he will team up with French Open and Wimbledon champion Carlos Alcaraz in Paris.

Rafael Nadal

“I played the final, that’s positive. I was able to play long matches without having an injury, that’s good,” added Nadal of his week in Sweden.

The former World No. 1 has played just six tournaments this year due to injury while his ranking has dropped to 261.

“In some way I felt that I arrived here practising much better than what I played on the tournament during the whole week. That’s something that I am not satisfied with,” he explained.

“I arrived here with the feeling that I was playing a good level and I was not able to show that during the whole week. That is something that I am not happy with.

“Anyway it’s a final, so I can’t say it’s a bad result because it’s the first final since a long time ago. But I was not able to feel myself comfortable enough during the whole week to be satisfied with the week of tennis that I played.”

Rafael Nadal has always analysed his performances with great perspective. After a disappointing 6-3, 6-2 defeat to Nuno Borges on Sunday in the Nordea Open final, the Spanish legend saw both sides of the coin when looking back on his week in Bastad.

While the 38-year-old was not happy with his tennis overall, despite grinding his way to his first final since Roland Garros in 2022, Nadal was boosted by the way his body handled the heavy load of match play on the ATP 250’s clay courts.

“The level was so far from what it should be,” he said of his display on Sunday. “Probably the energy too. It has been a long week with long matches. Even if my body, I don’t have damage, that’s important — but mentally and physically, I am not used to playing four days in a row and playing long matches.”

After beating fifth seed Cameron Norrie in straight sets on Thursday, Nadal won three-set marathons against fourth seed Mariano Navone and Duje Ajdukovic over the next two days. Those battles appeared to take their toll on Sunday, when Nadal was flat against Borges.

“I need to analyse well and find the reason why I played that way, even if the energy was not right,” he said. “A lot of things that can’t happen on court if you want to play at the level that I want to play. Things like this can happen today, and that’s the situation. I don’t have to lie or hide anything.”

Rafael Nadal

 

Despite his disappointment, Nadal gave full credit to Borges, who will move to a career-high PIF ATP Ranking of No. 42 his first ATP Tour title: “I have to give the credit to him,” Nadal said after their first Lexus ATP Head2Head meeting. “He did a lot of things well, missed not much, returned well. He converted opportunities, so well done for him, happy for him. He deserved it more than the rest of the players who played in this tournament. I wish him to enjoy this great moment.”

As he looks ahead to the Paris Olympics at Roland Garros, where Nadal will play singles and compete in doubles with Carlos Alcaraz, the Spaniard is hopeful that he can translate his high level in practice to the match court. Even when he was winning in Bastad, he was not fully happy with his tennis.

“I played the final, that’s positive,” he said, looking at the big picture this week. “I was able to play long matches without having an injury, that’s good.

“In some way I felt that I arrived here practising much better than what I played on the tournament during the whole week. That’s something that I am not satisfied with. I arrived here with the feeling that I was playing a good level and I was not able to show that during the whole week. That is something that I am not happy with.

“Anyway it’s a final, so I can’t say it’s a bad result because it’s the first final since a long time ago. But I was not able to feel myself comfortable enough during the whole week to be satisfied with the week of tennis that I played.”

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