Eurosport's experts have been attempting to get to grips with the ongoing men's GOAT debate in light of
Rafael Nadal having clinched a record-extending 14th
French Open title.
The King of Clay sealed his latest historic triumph at Roland-Garros
after putting on an absolute masterclass to down Casper Ruud in
comprehensive fashion with a 6-3 6-3 6-0 victory on Sunday afternoon. Nadal now has a staggering 22 Grand Slam singles titles to his name, which puts him two clear of the tallies of his great tennis rivals
Novak Djokovic and
Roger Federer in the all-time race.
Chris Evert opened:
"I thought two years ago that it would be Novak [who would win most Grand Slam titles], he was No. 1 in the world, Rafa was starting to only win the French Open and we weren’t sure if he could win on the hard courts as well. But now he’s two ahead, his body seems to be holding up pretty well. I think this title is the most meaningful ever, going through adversity."
Tim Henman added:
"If Nadal is healthy, which is a big challenge now with this foot injury, can he win Wimbledon? Absolutely. That is incredibly exciting. In terms of who is going to end up with the most amount of Grand Slams, a couple of years ago I would have said Djokovic, for sure. But right now, with that little bit of distance, I think Nadal has got a great chance. It’s going to be fascinating to see. You have got another opportunity in three weeks’ time so fingers crossed, I so hope Rafa can be there on grass."
Mats Wilander added:
"I would think it must be the sweetest title [that Rafa has won at Roland-Garros]. First of all, he didn’t even know if he was going to be able to play. Let’s now not just focus on 14 [French Open titles], but 22 [Grand Slam singles titles]. He is ahead of Roger and Novak now. Maybe this could be the main reason why he will be the greatest player of all time. But again, he’s so humble and so in the present moment that it sounds like he is going to keep going."
And finally Corretja:
"I don’t understand anything. How Rafa wins, how he could barely walk a couple of weeks ago. The first week he was okay, and then all of a sudden he raised his level against Novak and then again against Zverev. Today, to me, it seemed like he was not even at 100 per cent, and that is with respect to Casper, who did what he could. I don’t understand how he did it. One day he needs to tell us how this is possible because I don’t get it."