In most people's minds, Roger Federer is the undisputed greatest of all time in men's tennis history: he has the most grand slam titles/finals/SFs/QFs, the most weeks spent at #1, and seemingly unbreakable streaks of 10 consecutive finals, 23 consecutive semifinals, 36 consecutive quarterfinals.
But most people are wrong: when Rafael Nadal's resume is juxtaposed with Federer's, it becomes clear that it is he who deserves the best ever moniker.
Nadal is 23-14 head-to-head with Federer, including 9-3 in Grand Slams, and 6-3 in Slam finals
37 games is not an insignificant sample size, nor is 23-14 close. Granted, Federer has the slight edge (12-10) in matches played off clay courts, but Nadal is 13-2 when they played on the dirt. And in their biggest matches in grand slams, Nadal has dominated. Even if we removed Nadal's 5 wins over Federer at the French Open, he still has a winning record against Federer in grand slams.
Nadal has won a higher percentage of grand slam matches, and grand slams entered
Nadal has won 16 of 50 grand slams he's entered, or 32% of all slams played.
Federer has won 19 of 71 grand slams he's entered, or 26.7% of all slams played.
Nadal's slam W/L: 226-33, 87.26%
Federer's slam W/L: 325-52, 86.21%
Nadal has more Master's 1000 titles and Olympic Gold Medals
Other than grand slams, Master's 1000 events are the toughest and most prestigious events on tour. Nadal is tied with Novak Djokovic with the most 1000 title wins at 30. Federer is 4 behind with 26.
Further, Nadal won olympic gold in both singles and doubles, while Federer only won it in doubles.
Nadal's best surface is under represented on tour
Granted, Federer's best surface is grass, which is also under represented on tour with only a few tournaments a year. However, Clay is played all over the world, yet there is only a short 2-3 month clay court season, yet hard courts (which are far more similar to grass than clay) are played all year long. There's a much stronger correlation between strong grass court players and strong hard court players as there is between either surface and clay. Given this, you could argue that near 50% of the tournaments on tour should be the slower clay courts to balance out with the faster courts.
Not to mention, Nadal beat Federer in the Wimbledon final and took another match to 5 sets while Federer is 0-5 vs Nadal at the French and never took Rafa all 5 sets.
Had Nadal won their final in Australia, in which he was up a break in the 5th, this debate may already be over.
- Nadal would be only 1 slam behind (17 to 18) instead of 3 (16 to 19)
- Nadal would be 10-2 in grand slams, and 7-2 in finals
- Nadal would have at least two wins at each major
Instead, that single match, or you could extend it to a come from behind win in that single set, kept Federer's place in the public's mind as the current G.O.A.T. But when you look at the bigger picture -- dominating head to head record, won a higher percentage of slams, more big titles outside of slams -- Nadal has a compelling argument for why he is the best ever.
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