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Nadal trying to determine fitness for French Open
Fourteen-time French Open winner Rafael Nadal, 37, has returned to Roland Garros and is practicing to see whether he is ready to compete at the upcoming event.
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PARIS -- Rafael Nadal returned to Roland Garros on Monday to practice and try to figure out whether to compete at the French Open he has won 14 times.
The 37-year-old Spaniard showed up with coach Carlos Moya. A video on the Open's official social media showed Nadal arriving by car.
The training was set for 5 p.m. local time. It would give him a chance to reacquaint himself with Court Philippe Chatrier's red clay -- he hasn't played a match there in two years -- and to test his fitness.
The tournament begins Sunday, and whether Nadal will enter remains uncertain.
He is still regaining his match readiness after missing nearly all of 2023 with a hip injury that required surgery and much of this season because of problems with a hip muscle and an abdominal muscle.
His recent loss in the Italian Open second round (6-1, 6-3 to Hubert Hurkacz) left Nadal unsure about whether he would consider himself ready for the French Open.
"Let's see what's going on, how I feel myself mentally tomorrow, after tomorrow, and in one week," Nadal said last week at the Italian Open. "If I feel ready, I [am] going to try to be there and fight for the things that I have been fighting [for for] the last 15 years, [even] if now [that] seems impossible."
As of Monday, Nadal still had not announced whether he would play in Paris. This is expected to be his final season on tour -- so this would be his final appearance at a tournament he has won more times than any other tennis player has won any Grand Slam title.
He won the French Open in 2022 for his 22nd major championship, which ranks second among men to Novak Djokovic's 24.
Nadal missed the French Open last year because of the hip.