RAFAEL NADAL SAID he would โfight to keep goingโ after beating Casper Ruud in the final to win his 14th French Open title, despite being hampered by injury.
The record 22-time Grand Slam champion has been suffering from a chronic left foot problem and said earlier this week he was not sure how long he could continue and that every match at Roland Garros could be his last.
On the eve of the final, he even said heโd rather lose Sunday in exchange for a new foot.
โI donโt know what can happen in the future, but Iโm going to keep fighting to try to keep going,โ Nadal said after thrashing Ruud 6-3, 6-3, 6-0.
โFor me, itโs incredible to play here. Itโs an incredible feeling.โ
Nadalโs victory was his 112th in the clay-court major, against only three defeats.
His participation at the tournament had been in doubt even earlier in the season after another absence due to a rib stress fracture.
Sundayโs victory came 17 years to the day since Nadal won on his Roland Garros debut in 2005.
The 36-year-old, the oldest man to win the French Open, paid tribute to his team for helping him continue at the top of the sport.
โI donโt know what I would do in terms of injuries if it wasnโt for the team, my family and everyone around me,โ said Nadal.
โI wouldโve already retired much before if it wasnโt for youโฆ I never believed I would be here at 36, being competitive again, playing in the most important court of my career one more time in a final.
โIt means everything to me. It means a lot of energy to try to keep going.โ
He needs a break from Injury :: he has such poetical so we all hope this is a good year for him โฆโฆ