Toni Nadal

Antonio "Toni" Nadal Homar (Spanish pronunciation: [anˈtonjo ˈtoni naˈðal oˈmaɾ]; born 21 February 1961) is a Spanish tennis coach. Toni Nadal is the uncle and ex-coach of tennis player Rafael Nadal and the elder brother of Spanish footballer Miguel Ángel Nadal. With 16 Grand Slam titles won with Rafael Nadal, he was the most successful coach in the history of tennis until Marián Vajda surpassed him in 2020, when Vajda and his player Novak Djokovic won their 17th Grand Slam title together.

Toni Nadal
Toni Nadal during practices at the 2015 Aegon Championships in London
Country (sports) Spain
Born (1961-02-21) 21 February 1961
Manacor, Mallorca
Coaching career (1990–present)
Rafael Nadal (1990–2017)
Coaching achievements
Coachee Singles Titles total75
Coachee(s) Doubles Titles total11
List of notable tournaments
(with champion)

Career Golden Slam (Nadal)
Australian Open (Nadal)
10x French Open (Nadal)
2x Wimbledon (Nadal)
3x US Open (Nadal)
Olympic Gold Medal (Nadal)
30x ATP World Tour Masters 1000 (Nadal)
4x Davis Cup (Nadal)

Coaching awards and records
Records

Early life

Toni Nadal, who was born into a Spanish family, was the third child, having two other brothers.[1] His younger brother Miguel became a professional football player for FC Barcelona.[1] Toni Nadal tried participating in several sports including football, table tennis, and swimming.[1] He achieved the title of junior champion of Balearic Islands in his table tennis career.[1] He was the first of his siblings to play tennis when he started doing so at fourteen years old.[1] Nadal was inspired to join the sport when he saw Ilie Năstase win the Barcelona Masters in 1972.[1]

Career

Nadal worked as a tennis coach and as a manager for a tennis club.[2] He obtained a trainer's degree and taught at the tennis club his brother Miguel was a member of in Manacor.[1] Nadal also became a manager of the Manacor tennis club while teaching younger students. At this time, Nadal began coaching his nephew, Rafael Nadal.[3] The majority of Toni Nadal's coaching career has been spent with Rafael.

Coaching style

Nadal has described his coaching style as 'hard', saying that he occasionally puts too much pressure on Rafael, but that he does so because he wants him to succeed.[4] When Rafael was younger, he would be nervous of having lessons by himself with Nadal.[3] Rafael stated that as a child he would sometimes return home from tennis lessons crying.[3] Nadal believed that being such a hard coach would make his pupils better tennis players.

Nadal required that his pupils show respect for their equipment, and stated that he would immediately stop coaching Rafael if he ever threw his racket out of frustration.[2] Nadal believed that throwing a tennis racket showed a lack of respect towards people who could not afford the same equipment and the sport itself.[2]

Nadal strives to teach players to be responsible for themselves. He trained Rafael on poor tennis courts with old tennis balls to show that it was not the equipment that would decide if he won or lost.[2] He believed that losing was a fact of competing in sports and that the only one responsible for winning or losing was the player.[2]

Nadal had an authoritarian attitude with the players that he coached.[2] He wanted his opinions to be important to players he was coaching rather than it just being advice.[2][3] He did not want to be paid by Rafael Nadal because he believed that it would make him less of an important figure.[2] Without being paid, he could say whatever he felt without a chance of Rafael being able to fire him like a regular coach.[2]

Success

Toni Nadal was the record holder of the most Grand Slam titles won as a coach with 16 until February 2, 2020, when Marián Vajda and Novak Djokovic won their 17th Grand Slam title together in the Australian Open, giving Vajda the sole possession of the top position in the history of tennis.

Toni Nadal previously assumed the lead on coaches' rank list with his 12th Grand Slam title as a coach on June 9, 2013, when Rafael Nadal defeated David Ferrer in the Roland Garros final in Paris, breaking a tie with Lennart Bergelin, coach of Björn Borg between 1974–1981.[5][6]

Calls for replacement

In 2015, after Rafael Nadal lost in the second round at Wimbledon to Dustin Brown, who was ranked No. 102 at the time, former world No. 1 John McEnroe said on BBC Radio 5 Live that the Spanish tennis star should "get a new damn coach".[7] Rafael had failed to reach the semifinals at all four Grand Slam events that year.[7] In February 2016, at the Buenos Aires Open, Toni Nadal admitted that Rafael would have probably already replaced him had he not been his uncle.[8]

In December 2016, Rafael Nadal added countryman[9] Carlos Moyá, a former number one tennis player in the world, to work alongside Toni Nadal as his coach.[9] Toni Nadal was the first one to contact Moyá to see if he would be willing to join Rafael's coaching team,[9] believing it would be the perfect time to include him.[9] Carlos is also expected to be working with Toni with projects for the Rafa Nadal Academy.[9]

Leaving Rafael Nadal's coaching team

Toni Nadal Coaching Rafael Nadal

In late February 2017 Toni Nadal announced that he decided to retire from his nephew's coaching staff.[10] Toni had informed Carlos Moya and his brother (and Rafael's father) Sebastián, of his intentions.[10] Toni originally withheld the knowledge of his plans to separate from Rafael, who found out when it was released in the news.[10] Toni did not inform Rafael of this decision because he did not want to distract Rafael from his tennis.[10] Toni stated that he came to regret keeping this information from his nephew.[10]

Currently, Toni plans on working at the Rafa Nadal Academy.[10] He stated that he wants to work with younger players and develop their talent.[10]

Rafael stated that he is happy to know that Toni is doing what he wants and does not hold any resentment towards his departure.[11] Rafael also stated that he believed it was a good time for Toni to focus on projects like the Academy.[11]

gollark: * excessive
gollark: > but it wont hangI mean, exessive swapping often *functions* pretty much like hanging.
gollark: Linux is allegedly meant to kill programs which use too much RAM, but in my experience it just swaps crazily.
gollark: Out-of-memory.
gollark: Generally, if you use unreasonable amounts of memory, your thing will either be OOM-killed or it'll just start swapping crazily and be very slow.

References

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