There are two types of tennis courts. One is the natural grass court that looks green and another is the clay court that looks reddish-brown in colour. Rafael Nadal has been called the King of the Clay because of his insane records on the clay courts.
He has won 90 clay-court titles in total. For the last 14 odd years, Nadal has overwhelmed this surface as no one has. He has records that are hard to accept. He has been winning records that seem to be made up and he has video clippings on the web that gaze directly out of a computer game. There is no other player who has dominated the game of tennis on Clay court as Rafael Nadal has. But that is not all that makes him strong.

Rafael Nadal’s early days of tennis were brought up on clay. Not in a real sense yet he burned through the vast majority of his youth playing tennis on it. His game was constantly worked to suit the red surface the best. Substantial topspin forehands, mind-blowing protection, and a position path behind the gauge are every one of the exemplary blends to rule on clay courts. Additionally, he has one of the strongest forehand and backhand in the world.

The way of playing great clay court Tennis is consistency. It is frequently observed that great clay courters can hit more than 100 shots without losing power and core interest. Nadal is the same. Indeed he is the best at it. His capacity to restore each shot with interest is confirmation of how predictable he is on a clay court. This is why he is designated the King of the Clay!!