For Rafa Nadal, a new coach would spell disaster

By Daisy Cousens / Roar Pro

The draw for Indian Wells is complete, and Rafael Nadal is looking at a bit of a doozy.

With the big-serving Gilles Muller a distinct threat in the second round, a potential rematch of the Australian Open with Fernando Verdasco in the third, and the almost-giant slayer Gilles Simon a fourth round possibility, it’s a tricky start to say the least.

In addition, Japanese sensation Kei Nishikori is in his quarter, and the juggernaut that is Novak Djokovic is looming in the semis. On paper, Nadal certainly has his work cut out for him.

In the past, the tennis world has assumed he would cut through these foes like wheat. However, after a seven-month absence in 2014 owing to a broken wrist, a back injury, and appendicitis crushed his confidence, calls for a new coach have been flying for quite a while, after his less-than-perfect 2015.

Every tennis expert, critic, and worried Nadal-partisan fan is throwing around ideas; he needs to uproot his current coaching team, or hire a guest coach, or change his game completely, or any other myriad of options. After all, tennis players hire new coaches all the time, and in Nadal’s situation, it would come as no surprise.

We can argue it certainly worked for Roger Federer and Andy Murray. The additions of Stefan Edberg and Amelie Mauresmo catapulted them back onto tennis’ top tier. And we all know what happened when Novak Djokovic brought Boris Becker on board. But here’s the thing; Federer, Murray, and Djokovic are not like Nadal. Very few people are.

There are two key differences between Rafa and every other top player, which would render a new coach potentially disastrous.

Firstly, Rafa thrives on consistency. Every aspect of his life is compartmentalised in such a way as to retain a particular through-line, to prevent his anxious mind from wandering. It extends beyond his water bottles routine (they must be placed diagonally, labels facing out, in front of his chair), walking across the ‘Melbourne’ sign on Rod Laver Arena, and his famous wedgie-pulling scenario when returning serve. It goes right to the heart of the enigma that is Nadal.

The reason he has had the same coaching team from the word go is not simply because they collaborate well, or because head coach Toni Nadal is his uncle. It’s because their collective, familiar energy calms and settles their charge. And it’s not just the coaches; Rafa has also had the same physical therapist, agent, press agent, and doctors for the majority of his career. Put simply; big change does not aid him.

Adding a new team member, a new soul to the Nadal fortress may very well topple it, rather than fortify it. Aside from anything else, the inevitable guilt at sacking or sidelining his uncle, generated by the huge emphasis he places on family, would add further disquiet to Nadal’s already fragile psyche. Not the correct ingredient when looking to rectify a crisis of confidence.

Speaking of confidence, the second key difference is Rafa relies on winning to maintain it. Unlike Federer and Djokovic, Nadal does not have a healthy ‘champion’s ego’ to fall back on when times are tough. In order to be confident, he has to win. However, in order to win, you have to be confident.

It wouldn’t matter if a super coach flew in from Mars with a book containing every secret to tennis, Rafael Nadal is not going to start winning consistently while he’s caught in the confidence-trap. No amount of new coaches, or tweaking his game plan, is going to change that. It’s simply how he’s wired.

For Rafael Nadal to maintain a consistent winning streak, he has to break out of the confidence ‘chicken and the egg’ cycle. For every other athlete in the world in Nadal’s position, I would clamour for them to change something. However, Nadal is not every other athlete. He has a uniquely formulaic mind, and his way of doing things is as driven by psychology as much as practicality.

Throwing big change at him would tip the balance. The formula would be corrupted, his modus operandi compromised, and he could spiral into a pit of anxiety and guilt very hard to come back from. His team has thought this through. They know shaking up the natural Nadal-order is not to be advised.

If Rafa Nadal can navigate a tricky Indian Wells draw, and play competitively against Djokovic in the semis, it will have an infinitely more positive effect than a change to his coaching team. And if somehow, propelled by his killer instinct and a thirst to prove himself, he manages to win the tournament, the backpedalling by his critics will be extraordinary to behold.

The Crowd Says:

2016-11-05T14:02:42+00:00

Saleem

Guest


For Nadal it is very difficult to get out of the bond of Toni Nadal. But only one thing ever felt giant leap of improvement is necessary in his service. If Novak can improve his serve why not Nadal ,hiring specialist coach for service and return of service will not hamper relationship with old team. Moreover adding new arsenal. The pounding game may suits new comers Nadal should adopt change of pace game and down the line forehand strategy. Novak successful with his down the line backhand against right handers, why Nadal not using forehand down the line effectively? Drop and lob most important shots of tennis are less used in a match by Nadal. Who ever coach Nadal now he needs to improve his serve and return of serve. Lob and drop.

2016-03-13T10:40:09+00:00

Norma

Guest


You are a champion "RAFA" don't u ever forget this ok ????❤️

2016-03-13T10:34:34+00:00

Norma

Guest


You will always be my hero & Spain's #1 player in the world xx❤️⭐️????☺️??

2016-03-12T23:45:47+00:00

Bandy

Roar Guru


Becker improved djoko's serve and encouraged him to approach the net more, Edberg definitely added more of a net influence to feeder's game as well, a different mindset more than stroke correction. Coaches are usually a friend first and coach second for top tier players, but to say they don't add anything at all is a little harsh.

2016-03-12T16:37:20+00:00

Michele Kihiu

Guest


Well written and on point. Wishing Rafa (and his team) the very best at Indian Wells.

2016-03-11T22:15:55+00:00

andreas missiroli

Guest


boris becker , amelie mauresmo, stefan edberg didnt bring ANYTHING to Djokovic, Murray and Federer respectively . Or do you still think that a coach / manager helps these players to improve their level of play, their rank?? B..........s! Top athlets need just friends and somebody who can help planning training, booking planes and courts NOT CERTAINLY TO IMPROVE THEIR GAME LEVEL!!!!!

2016-03-11T21:25:57+00:00

Norma

Guest


All the best for Indian wells Rafa, we ❤️you champ!! ❤️⭐️????

2016-03-11T03:53:55+00:00

clipper

Guest


The FO will be telling. If he gets a favourable draw, Novak gets ousted, he could easily grab another title and boost his confidence. If not, it may hard to turn around this decline. Think it's a bit too late for a new coach at the moment - another few loses and they would get the blame. Very hard to keep up the physicality of his game, lucky he's still in the top 5 after over a decade on.

2016-03-10T15:36:43+00:00

AndyMira

Guest


Daisy Cousens..very well writen..i totally agree with all you said..if it's anyone else,i have no doubt that they can settle this confident issue sooner..like the great roger federer has been through in 2013..and in 2014 he's already comeback with a bang..but this is rafa nadal we're talking about..it's not a case of confident anymore..it's much deeper than that..the painful and humiliating loss that he has to endured all through last year not only has stripped all the confidence that already barely there,but has scarred his mind and soul so bad,and coupled with his famous ocd..one thing led to another..just like a giant snowball rolling with frightening consequences..and the result from it..we saw a rafa nadal that we''ve never seen before..his lack of speed and weak serve only adding to the piling problem..so,if he want to taste a win back..he has to deal with his enormous anxiety first..and that of course is no small task..but being a great champion that he is..i'm sure he can get through it..but if he can't..no matter..what he's already achieved has been amazing and incredible considering how injury prone his body is..

2016-03-10T13:14:48+00:00

Yin Nooy

Guest


He said he is working on getting back to his real level. Getting close wouldn't you say! If he is there right now, none of these guys will be a threat to him.

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