Federerberg:
Re: The narrative that "most of Nadal's losses are due to injury." Can you please give me data to back this up? I mean, this is a bold statement. The guy loses, say, 10-12 matches per year on average (give or take), are you telling me Nadal fans claim 7 of these are due to injuries?
You know what, I'll bite, I want to look at every Nadal loss at a major since 2005:
Australian Open 2005: Lost a 5 setter to Hewitt that kind of put him on the map as the next prodigy. No excuses made.
Wimbledon 2005: Nobody says it's due to injury. Nadal lost to Gilles Muller when he was still pretty green on grass, no pun intended.
US Open 2005: Lost to Blake. Nadal was still not that great on hards and Blake was a tough match-up for him actually. Too much big hitting.
Wimbledon 2006: Lost to Federer in the final. Nadal had played less than 10 grass matches in his entire pro career at that point, and the narrative was that Rafa did admirably well to reach the final and challenge Federer. No injuries were ever brought up.
US Open 2006: Lost to Youzhny. No excuses were ever made.
Australian Open 2007: Got crushed by Fernando Gonzalez's onslaught of forehands. The narrative was that Nadal is vulnerable to big hitters. Not that he was injured.
Wimbledon 2007: Even though he did get injured during that match (and called a medical time out when he was 4-0 up in the 4th), the injury was never used as an excuse. I think the interruption killed some of his momentum but that's on him. Also, he clearly recovered well enough to get break points in two separate games on Roger's serve in the fifth. He couldn't convert. That's on him. No excuses. Again, the narrative was more along the lines of praise for both on a great match.
US Open 2007: Knee injury and it's not debatable. In fact, even non Rafa fans accept that one. Keep in mind, Nadal had retired in Cinci a few weeks earlier and he only decided to play the US Open at the last minute. He lost to Ferrer, which is probably why no one has a problem admitting that Nadal's injury played a factor since nobody can stand Ferrer for some reason (if you're keeping count, this would be the first injury excuse).
Australian Open 2008: Tsonga crushed him. Nuff said.
US Open 2008: Murray beat him. I heard rumblings among fans of Nadal maybe being a bit exhausted after playing so much and winning so much in the months leading up to that tournament (keep in mind he had won the Olympics in China shortly before the US Open and had went on a huge unbeaten run). This was never an excuse. People say someone might have been playing too much tennis and winning all the time, including now with Federer leading up to the WTF. It's just an observation.
French Open 2009: Yes. We do bring up tendinitis. We can forever debate how much it affected him, but it bears mentioning he wasn't moving great (as admitted to by Magnus Norman the following year in a link I posted to you once before) and he withdrew from Wimbledon. Regardless, that's 2 injury excuses so far.
I do wonder though: when can we accept that an injury played a part in someone losing? In other words, do injuries NEVER affect anyone? And if they do, what do we accept is proof? Because in my book, moving poorly, withdrawing out of a major if you're the defending champion, and most importantly, LOSING AT ROLAND GARROS DESPITE HAVING NEVER LOST THERE EVER, AND HAVING NEVER LOST THERE AGAIN, and missing 6 weeks afterwards due to injury, might be somewhat of a proof that maybe something was off?
US Open 2009: Yeah, people talk about the abdomen injury, which again, was getting brought up before Nadal lost to Del Potro. To be honest, I don't think Nadal was playing well enough or was confident enough to beat Del Potro regardless, but yeah, injury was brought up. That's 3.
Australian Open 2010: While Nadal did get injured and retired, he was already down two sets so nobody ever blamed the loss on the injury, not even Nadal himself.
Australian Open 2011: This one is not debatable. At 2-1 in the first set (on serve) Nadal tore his hamstring. Even non Nadal fans accepted that it was one of those $hit happens unfortunate moments. Surprisingly, everyone accepted it, presumably because it was against Ferrer, again.
Wimbledon 2011: Novak owned him at that point. No excuses.
US Open 2011: Ditto.
Australian Open 2012: Ditto.
Wimbledon 2012: Injury excuse, made by Nadal himself later on so it received quite a lot of backlash, understandably so. Proceeds to take 7 full months off. I don't know what bigger proof do you need but I digress. The cop out is "Nadal always struggled in the first week." Except, he actually always went past the first week, and always reached the final, 5 straight times too. And just because you normally "stink" (allegedly) doesn't mean you couldn't have been injured in one particular match.
Wimbledon 2013: He played like crap. No injury excuse. He was red hot right before Wimbledon, and was even hotter right after Wimbledon. So if anyone ever made an excuse, that's a huge reach because they'll have to justify what transpired after.
AO 2014: He got injured in the match. The debate of whether he would have won or lost is irrelevant because we'll never know and he was getting his butt kicked regardless. But my point is, the injury can't be debated since we all saw it and it affected his movement.
Wimbledon 2014: Got his butt kicked against a red hot opponent despite, surprisingly, not playing too badly. That's the one Wimbledon loss out of the 3 upsets (Rosol, Darcis) where I genuinely thought there wasn't much Rafa could do. He was moving fine, hitting the ball fine, but winners and aces were flying past him.
So ultimately, it's safe to say nowhere near "most of his losses" are blamed on injury, regardless of how we feel about the matches in which injury excuses ARE made.
PS: The number of injury excuses are 4.
Which if you combine Mono for Roger's losses at the AO in 2008 and Wimbledon 2008, back injury for his loss against Berdych in 2010, and back injuries last year, it would amount to the same number. Rafa fans are admittedly far more vocal about it though. You get no arguments from me there.