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A story for any young player · ages 8 to 15

Three boys.
One road.

Rafa Nadal. Jaime Fermosell. Carlos Alcaraz. Three Spanish kids born twelve years apart. They never trained together. They never met as children. But if you put their childhoods next to each other, you see the same road — over and over again.

Read it slowly. The pattern is the lesson.

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01
Chapter one · ages 3 to 5

A racket bigger than they were.

Before any trophy, before any tournament, there was just a kid with a racket too heavy for his arms, hitting a ball that didn't always come back. Three boys. Three Spanish towns. Almost the same story.

Rafa · age 3
Rafael Nadal
Manacor · Mallorca · 1989
Uncle Toni Nadal — a tennis coach at the Manacor Tennis Club — puts a racket in his nephew's hands. The kid also plays football every day in the street.
"It is more important to be a good person than a good player." — Toni Nadal
Jaime · age 4
Jaime Fermosell
Madrid · 2001
His father Fernando Fermosell takes him to the courts at the Universidad Europea. Father, coach, and son — the three identities of one man.
"A father-coach can't fake it. He sees every shortcut you try to take."
Carlos · age 4
Carlos Alcaraz
El Palmar · Murcia · 2007
His father Carlos Sr., a former tennis player and director of the Real Sociedad Club de Campo, hands him his first racket. His grandfather built the courts they're standing on.
"Tennis is an individual sport, but my family makes it feel like a team sport." — Carlos Alcaraz
Three different towns. Three different decades. Same beginning: a family member, a court, a yellow ball — and a kid who fell in love.
02
Chapter two · ages 5 to 8

The quiet years nobody filmed.

No cameras. No magazines. No social media followers. Just thousands of forehands, backhands, and serves on small-town courts, with the same coach correcting the same mistakes — patiently, day after day.

Rafa · age 7
Five days a week.
Manacor Tennis Club
By 7, Rafa is training 5 sessions a week, 90 minutes each. Toni deliberately uses worn-out balls and rough courts — "so you learn that what matters is what you control, not what's around you."
"My nephew had the obligation to not complain, to enter the court every day in good spirits."
Jaime · age 6–7
Every day. The same court.
Universidad Europea, Madrid
Daily court time with his father. Not because he felt like it — because they had both decided. Same drills, same warm-up, same focus.
"Motivation gets you to the court. Discipline keeps you there when motivation is gone."
Carlos · age 5–8
The family club.
Real Sociedad Club, Murcia
Carlos grows up inside the club. The other coaches become uncles. The older players become big brothers. Tennis is the family business and a daily rhythm.
"You are a person before you are a tennis player." — Carlos's mother Virginia
Nobody becomes great in a year. They become great in five thousand mornings nobody remembers.
03
Chapter three · ages 8 to 11

First trophies. Small ones.

Then the first win. Not a Grand Slam — a tiny regional tournament with a plastic trophy and twenty parents clapping. But to a kid, that first win means: I can.

Rafa · age 8
Balearic Islands U-12 champion.
Mallorca · 1994
At 8, Rafa beats kids four years older to win the regional under-12 title. It is the moment Toni decides: this boy is serious. Training doubles. Football slowly recedes.
"He had to switch from leftie writing to leftie tennis — no, that's a myth. He chose it himself."
Jaime · ages 9–11
Local titles in Madrid.
Madrid junior circuit
Quiet, consistent winning. Local trophies. The kind of consistency that doesn't make headlines but builds the foundation for everything next.
"The trophy was the past. The next match is the only thing that matters."
Carlos · age 10
First sponsor: Babolat.
El Palmar · 2013
At 10, Babolat signs him as a young player — they spot what nobody else has seen yet. Rackets, strings, shoes for free. But the work doesn't change.
Loli Moreno, early coach: "Competitive, but good. Very humble. He was shy."
The first trophy is never the goal. It's just the proof that the work is working.
04
Chapter four · age 12

Twelve years old. National stage.

At twelve, all three of them stepped onto a national or international stage — and won.

Rafa · age 12 · 1998
Spanish U-12 Champion.
Madrid
Rafa wins the Spanish under-12 national championship in Madrid. The whole country starts asking: who is this kid from Manacor?
"You can't always control if you win. But you can always control how hard you fight."
Jaime · age 12 · 2010
Roland Garros — Longines Future Tennis Aces.
Paris
Jaime becomes the first Spaniard ever to win the Longines Future Tennis Aces final at Roland Garros, beating French player Blancaneaux 2–4, 4–0, 7–4. The next day he plays against Gustavo Kuerten and Mary Pierce.
Diario Marca: "The other Spaniard at Roland Garros — after Rafa Nadal."
Carlos · age 12 · 2015
Rafa Nadal Tour Masters U-12 champion.
Spain
Carlos wins the national under-12 Masters organized by the Rafa Nadal Academy. He doesn't know it yet, but the man whose name is on that trophy is the path he'll follow next.
IMG agent Albert Molina sees him this year and convinces the family to work with the agency.
Three twelve-year-olds. Three national wins. The same idea: I can compete with anyone.
05
Chapter five · ages 13 to 15

The mentor moment.

Around age 13–15, every serious young player faces the same fork in the road: stay where you are, or move closer to a great mentor. All three answered differently — and all three answered right.

Rafa · age 13–14
He stayed in Manacor.
Mallorca · with Toni Nadal
The Spanish Tennis Federation offers to move Rafa to Barcelona — the official path. His family says no. They keep him in Manacor with Uncle Toni. Family over facilities.
"Talent needs to be developed within a family structure that prioritizes humility and character."
Jaime · age 13–15
He went everywhere.
Madrid · Manacor · Florida · CIT
Jaime trained at Rafa Nadal's academy in Manacor. He hit with ATP top-10 player Fernando Verdasco at the CIT. He went to ASC Florida. Always with his father Fernando present in spirit.
"He didn't ask 'am I good enough to be here?' He asked 'what can I learn while I'm here?'"
Carlos · age 15 · 2018
He moved to Villena.
Equelite Academy · with Juan Carlos Ferrero
Carlos relocates from El Palmar to Villena (Alicante) to train under Juan Carlos Ferrero — former world #1 and 2003 Roland Garros champion. He commutes home for school and family.
Ferrero: "Winning tournaments is not his obligation. It is a consequence of the work."
Three different choices. Same principle: find someone whose standard is higher than yours — and stay close to them.
06
Chapter six · age 15

The first pro point.

At fifteen, they all stepped onto a professional court for the first time — and won. Not as kids. As pros.

Rafa · age 15 · April 2002
First ATP win.
Mallorca Open
At 15 years and 10 months, Rafa beats world #81 Ramón Delgado 6-4, 6-4. He becomes the 9th player in the Open Era to win an ATP match before 16.
Year-end 2002 ranking: world #199.
Jaime · age 15
First ATP point.
Pro circuit
At fifteen, Jaime scores his first ATP point on the professional circuit. The list of Spanish players who got an ATP point at 15 is tiny — and the names next to his are Rafa Nadal and Carlos Alcaraz.
Three Spanish kids. Pro point at fifteen.
Carlos · age 14 · Feb 2018
First ATP points.
Spain F5 Futures, Murcia
At 14 and turning 15, Carlos qualifies for the Spain F5 ITF Futures in Murcia (where his family lives) and beats world #292 Federico Gaio in the first round. First ATP points in the books.
"Youngest Spaniard to win an ATP match since Rafa Nadal in 2002." — ATP archive
The "overnight success" was twelve years of training. Every single one.
07
Chapter seven · age 17

At seventeen — the threshold.

At seventeen, all three had already crossed the line from "promising junior" to "real pro." But what makes this chapter different is how they thought.

Rafa · age 17 · 2003
Top 50 in the world.
ATP Tour
Rafa breaks into world top 50 at 17. Becomes youngest player to reach Wimbledon 3rd round since Boris Becker. Beats reigning Roland Garros champion Albert Costa at Monte-Carlo.
"Everybody should know their place in the world."
Jaime · age 17 · 2014
The notebook.
ASC Florida
After three weeks at ASC Florida, Jaime writes down — in his own hand, in English — what he learned. Not just shots. How to think.

· Play point by point
· Forgive yourself when you miss
· Applaud your opponent when they're great
· Pump my fist on good points
"The result doesn't matter. The only goal is to give 100% this point."
Carlos · age 17 · 2020
3 Challenger titles. Top 150.
Trieste · Barcelona · Alicante
Carlos wins 3 Challenger titles in one year. Becomes the youngest Challenger champion since Felix Auger-Aliassime, and the youngest Spanish Challenger champion since Rafa. ATP Newcomer of the Year 2020.
Ferrero: "Aggression of Djokovic. Approach to the net of Federer. Mentality of Rafa."
By seventeen, none of them were prodigies anymore. They were students who had decided to never stop being students.
08
Chapter eight

The pattern.

Read those seven chapters again. Different towns, different decades, different coaches. But the road is the same. Every. Single. Time.

Rafa Nadal
22 Grand Slams.
2005 → today
Roland Garros · Wimbledon · US Open · Australian Open. Still trains with Toni's words: "Don't complain. Enter the court in good spirits. Accept the difficulty."
Jaime Fermosell
Champion · RG · Spain · Europe
2010 → today
Roland Garros · Champion of Spain · Champion of Europe · Champion of Madrid · ATP pro since 15. The values from his notebook: still on the wall.
Carlos Alcaraz
World #1.
2022 → today
US Open champion at 19. Youngest world #1 in history at 19. Wimbledon champion. Roland Garros champion. Still calls Ferrero his coach and his family his foundation.

Here is the pattern hidden in plain sight:

Passion Discipline Humility Focus Hard work Love to learn

Not one of them was a "natural." Every one of them had a method. Every one of them had a teacher. Every one of them did the boring work for a decade before anyone heard their name.

The last page
YOU.

A letter — for you.

You are somewhere between 8 and 15. You have a racket in your hand. You love this sport. And you have probably wondered, at least once: could I become like one of them?

This story is not here to tell you "yes, you'll be world #1." Nobody can promise that. But this story can tell you something more useful: the road is real, and it's walkable.

Rafa Nadal had Toni and an old court in Manacor. Jaime Fermosell had his father and the Universidad Europea. Carlos Alcaraz had his father, his grandfather's club, and later Juan Carlos Ferrero. None of them was born with magic. All of them said yes — every morning, for years, when nobody was looking.

Here is what they all did. Put these six words on your wall:

PassionDisciplineHumility FocusHard workLove to learn

Passion — fall in love with the sound of the ball on the strings, not just the trophies.
Discipline — go to the court on the days you don't feel like it. Those are the championship days.
Humility — be the smallest person in the room when you train. Listen more than you talk. Carry your own bag.
Focus — point by point. Forgive yourself. Applaud your opponent. Play the next ball.
Hard work — every session has a goal. Write it down. Check it off.
Love to learn — every loss is a lesson. Every win is a lesson. Keep your notebook with you.

You are starting. That is the luckiest place to be — you still have all the years, all the discoveries, all the mistakes ahead of you. Don't be in a hurry to be great. Be in a hurry to get better today — and great will find you.

Go hit the ball. One point at a time.

— From the stories of Rafa Nadal, Jaime Fermosell and Carlos Alcaraz.
Manacor → Madrid → Murcia → the world.
The road is real. Start walking.
Point by point.
If you want a deeper version

There's a longer story too.

A scroll-by-scroll, film-with-Hans-Zimmer version focused entirely on Jaime Fermosell's full journey — for any young player.

📖 Read Jaime's full story 🎬 Watch the film