Commentators hate Nadal's outfit!

william

Rookie
Just watching Nadal's match and the commentators would not stop talking about how much they disliked his new outfit.

They said it looked cheap and that it just looked really weird on him. They also said it looked like a kids outfit. Just though I would provide another point of view on it.
 

Shaolin

G.O.A.T.
It does look like something a little kid would wear. However, anything is an improvement on sleeveless shirts and capri pants.
 

drakulie

Talk Tennis Guru
Look like he beat up Ernie from Sesame Street while doing a home invasion, and raided his closet.
 
O

oneleggedcardinal

Guest
It does look like something a little kid would wear. However, anything is an improvement on sleeveless shirts and capri pants.

I agree, he used to look like a complete tool.
 

JacKKyKung

Semi-Pro
Now Rafa is the second Agassi.

agassi-nike-91.jpg


Please! Don't do like this to him. Did Nike do any research before launch new gears?
 

drakulie

Talk Tennis Guru
^^^That shirt is way nicer than Nadal's. It's more 'rock'n'roll" to nadals 'Barney" look.
 

mikeler

Moderator
Funny stuff Drak! Fed's shirt is not too much better. Guess Nike is having a down start to the year.
 

PopWar

Rookie
I rather see him in capris and sleeveless shirts than the crap that he's wearing right now.
I'm disappointed with Nike's effort this year:(
 

MarrratSafin

Hall of Fame
Nadal's outfit, or rather just the new Nike line, looks terrible IMO. Nike in 06/07 have such nice designs. And Nadal definitely looks better in a sleeveless shirt than these weird polos..
 
D

Deleted member 21996

Guest
I want those old agassi kicks. What's the name of that shoe?

Those are the Nike Air Tech Challenge (commonly known as the ATC III) in 3\4 from 1990. they were retroed about 2 years ago.

lately they also retroed the ATC II

^^^That shirt is way nicer than Nadal's. It's more 'rock'n'roll" to nadals 'Barney" look.

Nadal looks like sooooooo cuuuuuute (does this resemble some "Truth"):twisted:
 

vmosrafa08

Semi-Pro
Everyone is used to Nadal wearing sleeveless shirts and 3/4 shorts. Now that Nadal has a new outfit that he likes, everyone decides to add their own opinion. If Nadal likes it, then he should continue wearing it.
 

Mick

Legend
i wonder if nadal picks out the clothes he's going to wear for the season or if some Nike person would do that ?
 

mrmo1115

Hall of Fame
i wonder if nadal picks out the clothes he's going to wear for the season or if some Nike person would do that ?

Nike did. I think they wanted Nadal to lose the 'kid' look, so they gave him regular shirts... And no more capri's anymore.
 

1st Seed

Professional
Still will be king of the wedgie, capri's or not.I"d have a Tough time shaking his hand at the end of a match.
 

seffina

G.O.A.T.
I don't mind them.. they just make me feel like Rafa's out for a stroll rather playing in a match.

I do like the shoes he's wearing lately.
 

matchmaker

Hall of Fame
Just wondering, is Nadal butt-picking less now? I imagine those capris to be tighter than a normal, above-the-knee short.
 

ronalditop

Hall of Fame
i like the fact the's using shirts cause it makes him look more mature. but the color is awful, looks really ugly and silly.
 
Last edited:

Shin

New User
More mature or not, Nadal always had the menacing looking on tour with his sleeveless shirts. He always stood because of that, now he just looks awkward and every time he hits his forehand, it looks like his biceps are going to rip the threads on those shirts.
 

0d1n

Hall of Fame
Not the commentators I've heard...
But anyway ... I could not care less what commentators have to say about his outfit, it doesn't look that bad really.
I like polo shirts, always liked them, always will. Like the majority I also hope that these shorts will help with his "pick addiction".
If not, then maybe a change of "lingerie" is in order.
 

DJG

Semi-Pro
The shirt needs to go in my view, it doesn't suit him. The shorts can stay if they fit better... erm, or to put it in another way if it keeps his finger clean...
 

dexian

Rookie
His outfit is still better than what he used to wear. Maybe he's in a transition where he, in the end, will wear what Federer.
 

NickC

Professional
I wouldn't mind the sleeveless if he ditched the capris. I saw a picture of him from years back when he did the shorts and sleeveless thing with a hat and he looked much better than he does with capris.
 

gymrat76

Banned
He got owned by Monfils. I could see Nadal lost his consistency in this game. But regardless, the real reason is, if Monfils could gain some little consistency in his overall game, I personally think he will push into top 4.
 

brownbearfalling

Hall of Fame
I wondering if Nadal is picking the outfit or Nike is making the decision for him? Nadal doesn't seem to be as picky as federer seeing that his shorts have switched from the baggy extra long to the capris and then from pockets inside to pockets outside. Either way the bold stripe polo does look a bit "abercrombie and fitch". I think that was the intention
 

Blade0324

Hall of Fame
Terrible, terrible, terrible is what I think of the shirts on Nadal. The shorts are ok but the shirt has to go. He looks really awkward in it and it does not look more professional unless you are on Mr. Rogers. Nothing at all wrong with his former look, he should go back. Someone needs to slap Nike up side the head and ask them what is wrong with them. You don't change a winning formula for the world #1, period.
 

FraNkcn

Rookie
Although his outfit may look childish, it actually (imo) pretty much color coordinates with his racquet and shoes...

nadal1.jpg
 

leonidas1982

Hall of Fame
http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1870373-1,00.html

After studying the exotic wildlife of the Galápagos Islands, Charles Darwin surmised that animals can develop unique traits when they evolve in isolation. In the tennis world, Rafael Nadal is such an animal. Based on the island of Majorca, Nadal and his family shunned mainstream training programs as he grew up, preferring the more homespun methods of Rafael's uncle Toni, whose tennis credentials consist of a brief stint competing on the national circuit. Passing up funding from Spain's national tennis academy, and scholarship money from America's private academies, Rafael and Toni would travel to the mainland only when a tournament required it. More skillful opponents were viewed as problems to overcome, not exemplars to be mimicked. Nadal — who first picked up a racquet aged 3 — and his coach found their own solutions, developing a style of play concerned less with form and technique than with results. What matters is winning. Or as Nadal puts it, "I've always liked the competition more than the tennis."

Whatever; it's worked. The approach ultimately produced an unorthodox, physical and devastatingly effective game that has taken Nadal, 22, to the top of men's tennis. In 2008, he recorded one of the sport's most successful seasons, becoming the first player since Bjorn Borg in 1980 to win on the slow clay of Roland Garros in Paris and the slick grass of Wimbledon in the same year, while also picking up an Olympic gold and the ATP's top ranking. Given all that, you might expect Nadal to stick with what's working. But he and, most especially, his coach can't help themselves. Having proved that Nadal's unique style can beat any player in the world, Toni has been quietly picking apart Nadal's game, remaking it shot by shot so that the Spaniard plays not less classically but more classically. As Nadal prepares for this year's first grand slam event, in Australia beginning Jan. 19, the top seed and his coach seem to be posing a new challenge: Can tennis's great outsider win by embracing normal? (See pictures of an alternative look at Wimbledon.)

All athletes develop their own mix of style and technique. But Nadal's peculiarity is quantifiable. San Francisco–based tennis researcher John Yandell has used video-capture technology to record the topspin of Nadal's forehand. He found that Nadal's shot rotates at an average of 3,200 times a minute. Andre Agassi, one of the game's great shotmakers, generated 1,900 rotations per minute in his prime, and current world No. 2 Roger Federer, whose forehand is considered among the game's best, generates 2,700. As U.S. Davis Cup captain Patrick McEnroe has said of Nadal, "His normal safe forehand is the toughest shot in the world."

That forehand is the central component of a style that tennis experts call "counter-punching." It's one that absorbs an opponent's attacking play with aggressive returns, and springs from Nadal and his uncle's contrarian instincts. Nadal is naturally right-handed. But early on, Toni decided his protégé should play with his left hand to impart unusual southpaw spin. Toni then encouraged, or perhaps failed to correct, the extreme grip Nadal uses, and the unusual way he swings his racquet. To this day, instead of using the forward momentum of his body to generate pace on his forehand as the training manuals recommend, Nadal falls backward from the net on his forehand, whipping his racquet behind his head instead of across his body. This movement results in looping shots that keep an opponent heaving balls back, often on the run, in a nightmare from which only an error provides release. Rallying with Nadal, says former Top 10 player turned coach Brad Gilbert, "is an education in pain."

It's a pain Nadal applied indiscriminately last year, even against Federer, who may just be the greatest player of all time. The Spaniard's rise to No. 1 ended a five-year period in which Federer's free-flowing and artistic play came as close as humanly possible to achieving perfection within the boxed constraints of a tennis court. Since his first French Open victory in 2005, Nadal's more muscular game has consistently overcome the Swiss star on Nadal's favorite surface — clay. But in 2008, Nadal came out on top in four meetings, including an epic five-set Wimbledon final that dethroned the grass-court champion in one of the greatest matches ever played. More than any other, that match — in which Nadal seized control early on and slowly squeezed the air out of Federer, even as the Swiss player thrashed out a brave but doomed comeback — summed up Nadal's unique brand of tennis: protracted but certain in its path to victory.

Nadal's exoticism on the tennis court stands in contrast to the conventional life he lives off it. The son of a prosperous family — his father, Sebastian, runs a successful window company, another uncle was a star soccer defender for Barcelona and Spain — Nadal retains the earnest good manners of a middle-class Spaniard. Rebellious in his fist-pumping, swashbuckling play, he dresses smartly for social occasions. He lists his hobbies as golf, fishing and video games, and follows his uncle's rule that he carry his own bags and racquets when at tournaments. He still lives with his parents. His girlfriend, 20-year-old Maria Francisca Perello, is a student in Majorca whom Nadal met through family friends. "People see Nadal as some sort of rebel, but he's really just a normal guy, a normal Spaniard. He likes normal things and he lives a normal life," says his publicist Benito Perez-Barbadillo. Or, as Nadal puts it, "I'm happy all the time. But I'm most happy at home."

The Weakness in Power
Nadal may be a simple guy off the court, but he has found himself cast as a villain on it. Tennis purists have long bleated that his jarring, defensive game is less pleasing to watch and less effective than Federer's fluid style. Recently, though, the game's élite have started to come around. Swedish great Stefan Edberg has declared Nadal "unbeatable" by today's professionals, and Pete Sampras told reporters on Dec. 2 it may be Nadal, not Federer, who breaks his career-defining record of 14 major championships (Nadal has 5; Federer, five years older, has 13).

But there is a caveat. Can someone with such a high-intensity game last long enough to break all the records? Tennis players' longevity varies depending on their style of play. As points and matches lengthen, careers often shorten. Nadal and his coterie of physical trainers know that the flip side of his heavy topspin is that it forces him to engage in bruising rallies. His muscle-bound physique — which Nadal says is down to genes rather than weight-lifting — adds an extra burden: the explosive forces those muscles generate put his body under increased strain.

Part 2: http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1870373-2,00.html
 
Top