Nadal Ready 'to Die' to Return to his Tennis Peak

Spain's Rafael Nadal practices in the lead-up to the 2022 Australian Open tennis tournament at Melbourne Park in Melbourne, Australia, January 3, 2022. REUTERS/Loren Elliott
Spain's Rafael Nadal practices in the lead-up to the 2022 Australian Open tennis tournament at Melbourne Park in Melbourne, Australia, January 3, 2022. REUTERS/Loren Elliott
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Nadal Ready 'to Die' to Return to his Tennis Peak

Spain's Rafael Nadal practices in the lead-up to the 2022 Australian Open tennis tournament at Melbourne Park in Melbourne, Australia, January 3, 2022. REUTERS/Loren Elliott
Spain's Rafael Nadal practices in the lead-up to the 2022 Australian Open tennis tournament at Melbourne Park in Melbourne, Australia, January 3, 2022. REUTERS/Loren Elliott

Rafael Nadal says he is "going to die" trying to return to the level of tennis that saw him capture a record 22 Grand Slam singles titles after his hopes of a first-ever ATP Finals title and becoming year end world number one were extinguished on Tuesday.

The 36-year-old Spaniard fell 6-3, 6-4 to Canada's Felix Auger-Aliassime in Turin to follow up on a defeat by Taylor Fritz on Sunday.

To stay alive in the finals, Nadal needed Fritz to beat Casper Ruud in straight sets on Tuesday.

But when Ruud won a set against Fritz, it meant a sharp exit for Nadal and also that his teenage compatriot, US Open champion Carlos Alcaraz, would finish the year as the top-ranked male player.

Ruud went on to beat Fritz 6-3, 4-6, 7-6 (8/6) to book himself a semi-final berth, while Fritz plays off with Auger-Aliassime on Thursday to determine which player goes through to the last four.

Nadal needed to win the year-end title for the first time in his trophy-laden career to have a chance of preventing Alcaraz from finishing number one, AFP reported.

"I mean, I don't think I forget how to play tennis, how to be strong enough mentally," said Nadal, who was playing in just his third singles match since the US Open in September.

"I just need to recover all these positive feelings and all this confidence and all this strong mentality that I need to be at the level that I want to be.

"And I don't know if I am going to reach that level again. But what I don't have any doubt, that I going to die for it."

Nadal -- who has nevertheless won the Australian Open and French Open this year -- praised 19-year-old Alcaraz, who is not able to play in Turin due to an abdominal injury.



Gymnast Kaylia Nemour May Be a Dual National, but Her Gold Medal Is All Algeria’s

 Paris 2024 Olympics - Artistic Gymnastics - Women's Uneven Bars Victory Ceremony - Bercy Arena, Paris, France - August 04, 2024. Gold medalist Kaylia Nemour of Algeria celebrates with her medal on the podium. (Reuters)
Paris 2024 Olympics - Artistic Gymnastics - Women's Uneven Bars Victory Ceremony - Bercy Arena, Paris, France - August 04, 2024. Gold medalist Kaylia Nemour of Algeria celebrates with her medal on the podium. (Reuters)
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Gymnast Kaylia Nemour May Be a Dual National, but Her Gold Medal Is All Algeria’s

 Paris 2024 Olympics - Artistic Gymnastics - Women's Uneven Bars Victory Ceremony - Bercy Arena, Paris, France - August 04, 2024. Gold medalist Kaylia Nemour of Algeria celebrates with her medal on the podium. (Reuters)
Paris 2024 Olympics - Artistic Gymnastics - Women's Uneven Bars Victory Ceremony - Bercy Arena, Paris, France - August 04, 2024. Gold medalist Kaylia Nemour of Algeria celebrates with her medal on the podium. (Reuters)

French-Algerian gymnast Kaylia Nemour may be a dual national who trains in France, but her Olympic gold medal is singularly Algerian.

In an interview with SNTV, a sports video partner of The Associated Press, Nemour and her coach credited Algeria for her performance on the uneven bars, for which she won a gold medal on Sunday.

The gymnast, who competed for France until 2021, said she was proud to be both Algeria and Africa’s first Olympic gold medalist in gymnastics.

“It’s really crazy,” she said in the interview.

Nemour draped herself in Algeria’s green and white flag and paraded around Bercy Arena after her win. She was embraced by the crowd after flipping and twisting to a score of 15.7 in the uneven bars, tied for the highest of the meet in any event.

Nemour has said she feels both French and Algerian. But she began competing for Algeria three years ago after a dispute between the French gymnastics federation and her club, Avoine-Beaumont, where she continues to train in western France.

She has been widely embraced by Algerians, on social media, on public television and in newspapers. Algeria's President Abdelmadjid Tebboune called her to congratulate her on her performance.

Questions about nationality are of little concern to her and her gymnastics, Nemour said.

“I don’t really think about it,” said Nemour, whose father is of Algerian descent. “I won this medal for myself and for Algeria. I represent Algeria. France is behind me. I turned the page.”

Nemour’s coach, Marc Tcherlinko, said the medal belonged to the Algerian Federation, which helped ensure the gymnast had the opportunities to travel for competition and best prepare for the Olympic Games.