'I have left a legacy': Emotional Rafa retires
Tennis legend tearfully calls it quits at the Davis Cup after he loses final singles match and sees Spain eliminated
Rafael Nadal bit his lower lip and his reddened eyes welled with tears as he stood alongside his Davis Cup teammates for Spain's national anthem in Malaga, Spain, Tuesday before what he — and everyone — knew might be the last match of his career.
Hours after Nadal's 6-4, 6-4 loss to Botic van de Zandschulp of the Netherlands was over, the evening did turn out to represent the 22-time Grand Slam champion's farewell to professional tennis, because, just after midnight, the Dutch eliminated the Spaniards in the quarterfinals.
And it was during an on-court, post-match ceremony to honor Nadal that he cried and cried, at the singsong chorus of "Raaa-faaa" from the spectators, at the video showing highlights from his more than two decades on tour and the collection of recorded tributes from current or former players such as his "Big Three" rivals Roger Federer and Novak Djokovic, Serena Williams, Conchita Martinez and Andy Murray, and stars from other sports such as golf's Sergio Garcia or soccer's David Beckham.
"The titles, the numbers, are there, so people probably know that, but the way I would like to be remembered is as a good person from a small village in Mallorca," the 38-year-old Nadal told the flag-waving, sign-toting crowd at the sold-out Palacio de Deportes Jose Maria Martin Carpena. "Just a kid that followed his dreams and worked as hard as possible. I have been very lucky."
He had said beforehand that his feelings would need to be put on hold, that this week was about attempting to claim one last trophy for his country, not about pondering his impending retirement, which he announced last month would come after this event.
But, he acknowledged after playing, that "the emotions were difficult to manage", and that he felt nerves out there amid the roars of an adoring audience that mostly showed up for one player and one player only.
"I leave with the peace of mind that I have left a legacy, which I really feel is not just a sporting one, but a personal one," Nadal told fans in Malaga in a speech during a ceremony to honor his retirement.
"I understand that the love I have received, if it was just for what happened on the court, would not be the same."