Who is the more successful athlete, Rafa Nadal on clay in tennis or Leo Messi in football?

Who is the more successful athlete?

  • Nadal in tennis (clay only)

    Votes: 46 80.7%
  • Messi in football (overall)

    Votes: 10 17.5%
  • 50/50

    Votes: 1 1.8%

  • Total voters
    57

Razer

Legend
You can easily compare Nadal on clay and Messi in football. It just doesn't answer the only question that your little brain seems to be able to see (which is if Nadal or Messi is a better sportsman). Just read first post!

Even my little brain understands that the first post and the thread in itself is bogus because football has to be compared with tennis as a whole, there is no comparison of football vs clay in particular. Why isn't your thick brain able to understand this ?

Asking if Messi's football is better or Nadal's clay is like asking whether Messi's body is fitter or Nadal's heart is fitter ? Does that register in your brain?
 
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WOAH, I did not expect the poll to be so one-sided in favour of Nadal on clay... I guess people here have little respect for Messi or the difficulty of football.

On that note, how about another one?:

Federer in tennis on grass (2003-2009, 2012, 2017) vs Jerome Boateng in football
 

Razer

Legend
Muhammad Ali or Lebron James?

Apples and Oranges comparison.

Boxers & other combat fighters are the embodiment of athleticism, can't compare non combat athletes with them, however Lebron for his size is easily the winner in that 6'6 nd above segment....

A less weird comparison would be ..... .Usian Bolt or Lebron James ....
 

ALCARAZWON

Professional
65TdVTc.jpg
 
Djokovic in Tennis
Wait, do you mean at AO or tennis overall?
If you mean AO, then it may be a somewhat worthy comparison, but Messi wins for sure.
If you man tennis overall, absolutely not. Even Jerome Boateng is better at football than Djokovic is at tennis. Boateng in football > Djokovic in tennis
2011/2015 Djokovic might also be a worthy comparison though.
 

vokazu

Hall of Fame
Wait, do you mean at AO or tennis overall?
If you mean AO, then it may be a somewhat worthy comparison, but Messi wins for sure.
If you man tennis overall, absolutely not. Even Jerome Boateng is better at football than Djokovic is at tennis. Boateng in football > Djokovic in tennis
2011/2015 Djokovic might also be a worthy comparison though.
Djokovic and Nadal play tennis, not clay.

In tennis Djokovic is the best.

Football.... They don't have clay football. Football is football. Tennis is tennis. You can't just pick a surface.
 

CHillTennis

Hall of Fame
Of course, if we were to compare Nadal's overall tennis career across all surfaces with Messi's football career, there is no question that Messi is a far more successful athlete.
In fact, Messi is a more successful athlete than any of the Big 3 of tennis in terms of level of play & career achievements. Prime Messi in football > 2006 Federer, 2011 Djokovic

However, in this comparison, we are looking exclusively at Nadal's achievements on clay. And in that case, who was the more successful athlete?
Who is Leo Messi?
 

AlecG

Semi-Pro
Of course, if we were to compare Nadal's overall tennis career across all surfaces with Messi's football career, there is no question that Messi is a far more successful athlete.
In fact, Messi is a more successful athlete than any of the Big 3 of tennis in terms of level of play & career achievements. Prime Messi in football > 2006 Federer, 2011 Djokovic

However, in this comparison, we are looking exclusively at Nadal's achievements on clay. And in that case, who was the more successful athlete?

Yeah I think "who is more dominant" would be a better way to phrase it. Honestly still too close to call for me. No one comes close to Nadal on clay, and no one comes close to Messi on grass (sorry Fedovic).
 

AlecG

Semi-Pro
I think both athletes have strong arguments:

Messi: football is much more difficult than tennis. In football, you need to be able to meticulously control and move the ball with utmost precision and at a very high speed too. Not to mention that you can only use your feet to do so, making direction control extremely challenging. You need incredible skill and athleticism to be able to compete at a professional level in football.
Whereas tennis is simply swinging a lightweight racket to hit balls to wherever you want. Just move your feet and strike the ball continuously, bam, bam, bam, and then, the person who hits harder and makes fewer errors wins, simple as that. It barely requires any skill to be able to compete at a professional level in tennis. Also, judging by the state of the current era in tennis, winning a Slam has become much easier than, e.g. in the early-mid 2010s or even the 2000s.

Nadal: even though tennis is much easier and barely requires skill, 112-3 & 14 titles at Roland Garros, along with 26 Masters on clay, are simply otherwordly dominance. Not to mention the number of times he won RG without dropping a. single. set.
His success on clay is overwhelmingly great that we cannot take him out of the conversation just yet.

If you're talking about skill then we can compare to any of the big three.

Nadal is very skillful but also relies on raw strength and insane topspin on the clay.

Novak isn't just the guy who hits the hardest without errors. He also has incredible precision that almost no other pro has achieved.

And Federer is basically in his own league on his type of artistry.

I would agree Messi is ahead of both, but when comparing to Nadal on clay we are talking about dominance, not skill, otherwise it's no contest.

But even when it comes to dominance I think it's pretty close.

Just listen to any serious pro talking about Messi and how far he was ahead of everyone else, despite the fact that it's a much more competitive sport, with far more competitors getting paid at a pro level. In that context the number of trophies Messi has and his dominance on the field is comparable at least.
 

dadadas

Semi-Pro
Nadal for consistency on a surface (14 RG) and Messi for peak throughout a season (73 Goals in 60 Games)

Nadal's reign at Roland Garros > Barcelona's dominance in La Liga.
Messi's best season in terms of goal scoring or his sextuple season > Nadal's best clay season

As for wow factor, Messi

in tennis, only Federer can make the audience say wow.
 
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dadadas

Semi-Pro
despite the fact that it's a much more competitive sport, with far more competitors getting paid at a pro level.
There is no comparision between tennis & soccer in terms of competition level. Top 3000 in soccer are millionaires while tennis has only about top 300 that can be classified as full time professionals. Tennis has always been an elitist sport.
 

dadadas

Semi-Pro
Also World Cup is a darn huge competition. You are talking about the competition that receives the eyeballs from the biggest nations on the planet. Japan (120m), US (330m) & Mexico (120m), populous European nations (around 300m), Brazil & Argentina (260 m combined). Roland Garros was never gonna be as big as World Cup. Only Olympics can compete against World Cup for global viewership.
 

insideguy

G.O.A.T.
There is no comparision between tennis & soccer in terms of competition level. Top 3000 in soccer are millionaires while tennis has only about top 300 that can be classified as full time professionals. Tennis has always been an elitist sport.
How did you come up with 3000 current soccer players being millionaires? I kind of ran this through my head. Im not really doubting the number but where did that come from? I know plenty make a lot of money but where did that stat come from?
 

dadadas

Semi-Pro
Average annual salary for about 2500 players from top 5 leagues plus Turkish league pays about 800k euros / year
 

insideguy

G.O.A.T.
2500 from top 5 leagues, Turkish league pays about 800k
Are you saying 2500 from the top 5 leagues make a million a year or more or are millionaires? Cause just looking up Bundesliga for example about 200 guys make over a million a year. And same with Seri A and LA Liga. So thats a little more than 600. However thats just guys in those three leagues who are making over a million a year. I would actually bet there are more than 3000 pro soccer players who are millionaires. Cause thats just one year salary. Some dude making 500 grand for 8 years or something is a millionaire as well.
 
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insideguy

G.O.A.T.
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Source: https://www.capology.com/
You cant take the average yearly salary. Thats an average from the top paid guys like Kane or whomever to the lowest guy in that league. This gives you a better idea.

https://www.capology.com/es/la-liga/salaries/ This tells you each players salary in each league. Anyway, I would say there are way more than 3000 millionaires playing soccer in the world. Because even if you dont make a million a year you can easily be a millionaire.
 
I dedicated 3x more effort to football than I do to tennis, but I was still very bad at football. It's always been too hard to improve. Whereas I was already playing at a semi-pro level in tennis after 6 years of training.
I actually regret putting too much effort into football when I was young. Had I invested this much effort into tennis, I am confident that I would be competing at the Slams against the likes of Djokovic, Sinner and Alcaraz right now instead of writing on TTW.
Football is not more difficult than tennis. Thing is maybe, that the talent pool here us way bigger, so becoming semi-pro (whatever that is) is tougher.
 
You cant take the average yearly salary. Thats an average from the top paid guys like Kane or whomever to the lowest guy in that league. This gives you a better idea.

https://www.capology.com/es/la-liga/salaries/ This tells you each players salary in each league. Anyway, I would say there are way more than 3000 millionaires playing soccer in the world. Because even if you dont make a million a year you can easily be a millionaire.
My team FC Cologne which is a bad first division team always fighting to stay in the league, pays even the last bench-sitter around 300k a year, so thar guy even can be a millionaire. The better teams in Germany one can be sure, next to every guy in the squad is a millionaire. Then you have all the other leagues like Italy, Spain, England etc and even in the second divisions there will be some millionaires. World-wide definitely way more than 3000.
 

insideguy

G.O.A.T.
My team FC Cologne which is a bad first division team always fighting to stay in the league, pays even the last bench-sitter around 300k a year, so thar guy even can be a millionaire. The better teams in Germany one can be sure, next to every guy in the squad is a millionaire. Then you have all the other leagues like Italy, Spain, England etc and even in the second divisions there will be some millionaires. World-wide definitely way more than 3000.
Yea I just looked up Koln. You have 8 guys on that team making over a million a year and 14 total making over 500 grand a year. And your payroll really aint that huge. Your highest paid guy is making 3.4 million.
 

AlecG

Semi-Pro
There is no comparision between tennis & soccer in terms of competition level. Top 3000 in soccer are millionaires while tennis has only about top 300 that can be classified as full time professionals. Tennis has always been an elitist sport.
Yep, it's terrible. And in tennis you have to pay to fly around the world doing futures and challengers to earn enough points to start getting paid, instead of playing in your home city in front of a home crowd like footballers do every second week of the year. It's the worst organised major sport by far. I think "elitist" is almost too generous.
 
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DonMcEnroe

New User
Of course, if we were to compare Nadal's overall tennis career across all surfaces with Messi's football career, there is no question that Messi is a far more successful athlete.
In fact, Messi is a more successful athlete than any of the Big 3 of tennis in terms of level of play & career achievements. Prime Messi in football > 2006 Federer, 2011 Djokovic

However, in this comparison, we are looking exclusively at Nadal's achievements on clay. And in that case, who was the more successful athlete?
 

AlecG

Semi-Pro
Football is not more difficult than tennis. Thing is maybe, that the talent pool here us way bigger, so becoming semi-pro (whatever that is) is tougher.

In tennis it's harder to get paid well for playing, because so few get paid well for playing.

But in soccer, it's much less likely to become a top 1000 player, because there is so much more competition because it's a more popular sport AND they're competing for paid jobs at that level in soccer.
 
Yea I just looked up Koln. You have 8 guys on that team making over a million a year and 14 total making over 500 grand a year. And your payroll really aint that huge. Your highest paid guy is making 3.4 million.
So that makes at least 14 millionaires at Cologne. In Bundesliga there will be at the very least 300 millionaires. In second division there will be many as well, we have to keep in mind, that there are many veterans as well who now play second division but used to play at bigger clubs, so we have 400 millionaires in Germany alone. Italy, England, Spain will have more such that we get to roughly 2000 in those big leagues alone. Then however, in almost all other leagues (Portugal, France, Belgium, Netherlands, Russia, China, Brazil etc.) you will have countless more millionaires at least in the bigger clubs. So all over the world there will be at the very least 5000 millionaires I would estimate.
 

AlecG

Semi-Pro
I think really serious career ending injuries are also more common in football, along with brain damage from heading the ball, etc.
 

AlecG

Semi-Pro
So that makes at least 14 millionaires at Cologne. In Bundesliga there will be at the very least 300 millionaires. In second division there will be many as well, we have to keep in mind, that there are many veterans as well who now play second division but used to play at bigger clubs, so we have 400 millionaires in Germany alone. Italy, England, Spain will have more such that we get to roughly 2000 in those big leagues alone. Then however, in almost all other leagues (Portugal, France, Belgium, Netherlands, Russia, China, Brazil etc.) you will have countless more millionaires at least in the bigger clubs. So all over the world there will be at the very least 5000 millionaires I would estimate.

There are also 5000 millionaires who play tennis. The difference is they were born with that money and didn't make it from playing tennis :p
 

Gizo

Hall of Fame
According to the Capology website https://www.capology.com/uk/championship/salaries/ , a total of 232 players in the Portuguse Primeira Liga (52), Dutch Eredivise (36), and English Championship (144) are currently earning salaries of USD 1 million per year or more.

I've deliberately chosen those 3 leagues, as you can view the details for them on the website for free - the same information for most other leagues is locked unless you pay for an account which clearly I'm not going to do !

The English Championship stat is particularly remarkable to me. It is only the 2nd tier league in England, and in terms of money and glamour is not even in the same stratosphere as the top tier and global behemoth that is the Premier League (the financial gulf between the two leagues has grown wider and wider over time). Yet still so many players it in, many of whom might never play a single minute of Premier League football, are earning big bucks. Even without considering the big 5 European leagues, it's a safe bet thousands of players in other leagues will be earning 7 figure annual salaries (I know for a fact that a good number in Liga MX in Mexico will be), of course with the amount varying slightly depending on whether you use USD, Euros, GBP etc. Probably a decent number of players in the 2nd tier in Germany, the Bundesliga 2 (the only other second tier league that is comparable to the Championship in terms of attendances, coverage etc.) are earning very good money, especially with some very big, illustrious clubs having been relegated into it in recent years.

In general given that football has by far the deepest talent pool, with no other sporting coming close there, I think that football players can be underrated in comparisons vs. athletes from other sports. For example from a UK perspective, many people were rushing to declare Murray as the greatest British athlete of all-time in 2016.

Now it goes without saying that his achievements have been incredible. But I find it difficult to rank him ahead of the likes of George Best, Bobby Charlton, Kenny Dalglish (widely considered to be the greatest player in the history of Liverpool, who are in turn one of the greatest clubs in football) etc., or more recently (while he has been disgraced due to his conduct away from the sport), Ryan Giggs who played at a high level for a ridiculously successful Man Utd team for so long. Also while UK sporting success is not remotely comparable to US sporting success of course, given that Murray in tennis would be no greater than Jim Courier as well, I find it difficult to believe that no British athletes in history have been greater than Courier (who could walk down many streets in the US without being recognised despise his tremendous success).
 
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RS

Bionic Poster
Apples and Oranges comparison.

Boxers & other combat fighters are the embodiment of athleticism, can't compare non combat athletes with them, however Lebron for his size is easily the winner in that 6'6 nd above segment....

A less weird comparison would be ..... .Usian Bolt or Lebron James ....
I was just messing a bit
 
According to the Capology website https://www.capology.com/uk/championship/salaries/ , a total of 232 players in the Portuguse Primeira Liga (52), Dutch Eredivise (36), and English Championship (144) are currently earning salaries of USD 1 million per year or more.

I've deliberately chosen those 3 leagues, as you can view the details for them on the website for free - the same information for most other leagues is locked unless you pay for an account which clearly I'm not going to do !

The English Championship stat is particularly remarkable to me. It is only the 2nd tier league in England, and in terms of money and glamour is not even in the same stratosphere as the top tier and global behemoth that is the Premier League (the financial gulf between the two leagues has grown wider and wider over time). Yet still so many players it in, many of whom might never play a single minute of Premier League football, are earning big bucks. Even without considering the big 5 European leagues, it's a safe bet thousands of players in other leagues will be earning 7 figure annual salaries (I know for a fact that a good number in Liga MX in Mexico will be), of course with the amount varying slightly depending on whether you use USD, Euros, GBP etc. Probably a decent number of players in the 2nd tier in Germany, the Bundesliga 2 (the only other second tier league that is comparable to the Championship in terms of attendances, coverage etc.) are earning very nice month, especially with very big, illustrious clubs having been relegated into it in recent years.

In general given that football has by far the deepest talent pool, with no other sporting coming close there, I think that football players can be underrated in comparisons vs. athletes from other sports. For example from a UK perspective, many people were rushing to declare Murray as the greatest British athlete of all-time in 2016.

Now it goes without saying that his achievements have been incredible. But I find it difficult to rank him ahead of the likes of George Best, Bobby Charlton, Kenny Dalglish (widely considered to be the greatest player in the history of Liverpool, who are in turn one of the greatest clubs in football) etc., or more recently (while he has been disgraced due to his conduct away from the sport), Ryan Giggs who played at a high level for a ridiculously successful Man Utd team for so long. Also while UK sporting success is not remotely comparable to US sporting success of course, given that Murray in tennis would be no greater than Jim Courier as well, I find it difficult to believe that no British athletes in history has been greater than Courier (who could walk down many streets in the US without being recognised despise his tremendous success).
Thanks for that stat. Given that, my estimate of 5000 is likely still way too low. If 146 players in English championships earn a million per year we will likely have 300 millionaires there at least. And that is second tier division. In third division there will likely still be several around and Premier league it is safe to assume next to everyone is a millionaire, so for England alone we will get close to 1000 (definitely if we consider UK as a whole). The best of the best will earn millions in next to every league with at least a bit of football tradition (in addition to the ones i mentioned, Mexico, Uruguay, Argentina, US, Japan all those leagues will have a good number of millionaires as well).

As for the second part, it is close to ridiculous to assume that Murray is greater than guys like Best, Charlton, Beckham etc. I think when talking greatest there seems to be a bias towards individual sports compared to team sports. In Germany, for the longest time, Becker was considered the greatest if all times which at the very least should be debatable with Matthäus or Beckenbauer.
 

Incognito

Legend
what if we compare just one aspect of Messi’s game to Nadal on clay. Like Messi’s dribbling and passing. I’m not sure what I’d vote in that case
Still Nadal!

Nadal beat a reigning french open champion on clay when he was just 15 years old. That’s even more impressive IMO.
 

insideguy

G.O.A.T.
So that makes at least 14 millionaires at Cologne. In Bundesliga there will be at the very least 300 millionaires. In second division there will be many as well, we have to keep in mind, that there are many veterans as well who now play second division but used to play at bigger clubs, so we have 400 millionaires in Germany alone. Italy, England, Spain will have more such that we get to roughly 2000 in those big leagues alone. Then however, in almost all other leagues (Portugal, France, Belgium, Netherlands, Russia, China, Brazil etc.) you will have countless more millionaires at least in the bigger clubs. So all over the world there will be at the very least 5000 millionaires I would estimate.
Yea I just look up the MLS. Which has a salary cap. And there are still 75 guys making over a million a year. And over 200 making 500 grand or more.
 

_phantom

Hall of Fame
Rafa's record at RG is comparable only to Bradman's 99.94 batting average in Test cricket.

For the uninitiated, most other greats have averages ranging between 50 and 55.
 
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