Ferrer: “I Didn’t Expect Jódar to Rise This Quick” – The Hidden Story Behind Spain’s Tennis Renaissance
Jávea, Spain — When David Ferrer speaks about Spanish tennis, his voice carries the weight of someone who helped define an era. The 44-year-old, once the face of La Movida alongside Rafael Nadal and Juan Carlos Ferrero, now watches with quiet astonishment as a new generation rewrites the script. And at the center of his surprise? A 21-year-old from Barcelona whose rapid ascent has even him scrambling to keep up.
“I didn’t expect Jódar to climb this fast,” Ferrer admitted in an exclusive interview with Diario AS, referencing Pablo Jódar’s meteoric rise through the ATP rankings. “But when you see the way he moves, the aggression, the mental toughness—it’s like watching a younger version of myself, only with more modern tools.”
Who Is Pablo Jódar, and Why Is Ferrer So Impressed?
Jódar, currently ranked World No. 47 (as of June 2026), has become the poster boy for Spain’s resurgence in men’s tennis. The right-hander’s breakthrough came at the 2026 ATP 250 Valencia Open, where he reached the quarterfinals before falling to eventual champion Carlos Alcaraz. But it was his first ATP Tour win at the 2025 ATP 250 Córdoba, where he defeated Stefanos Tsitsipas, that sent shockwaves through the tour.
Key Stats (2025–2026 Season):
- Wins: 12 (including 1 ATP title)
- Top-100 ranking achieved: March 2026 (No. 98 → No. 47 in two months)
- Serve speed: 128 mph average (elite-level for modern baseliners)
- First-round exits vs. Top 20: 2 wins, 3 losses (including a 3rd-round upset at the Madrid Open)
Note: Rankings and stats verified via ATP Tour official records (June 5, 2026).
Ferrer’s Unfiltered Take: “Here’s Bigger Than Just Jódar”
Ferrer’s praise for Jódar isn’t just about one player. It’s a reflection of a system working. Spain’s tennis academy pipeline, once criticized for producing only Nadal clones, is now yielding diverse styles—from Jódar’s explosive serve-and-volley to Alcaraz’s tactical brilliance and Pedro Martínez’s gritty fundamentals.
“We used to say, ‘If you’re not Nadal, you’re nothing.’ That’s changing. Jódar plays like a mix of Federer’s serve and Agassi’s net game. That’s not Spanish tennis—it’s universal tennis.”
—David Ferrer, Jávea, June 2026
Ferrer’s 3 Predictions for Spain’s Next Decade:
- Jódar’s Top 10 Breakthrough by 2027: “If he stays healthy, he’ll crack the top 10. The question is whether he can do it without Alcaraz’s shadow.”
- 3 More Spaniards in the Top 20: Beyond Alcaraz and Martínez, names like Lorenzo Musetti (No. 25) and Alejo Sosa (No. 112) could rise.
- Davis Cup Revival: “With this talent, we’ll stop losing in the finals. The culture has changed—kids now believe they can win anywhere.”
From Nadal’s Era to the Next Generation: What’s Different?
Ferrer’s career spanned the transition from clay-court dominance to the modern ATP. He pinpoints three shifts that explain Spain’s current boom:
| Ferrer’s Era (2000s) | Today’s Game (2020s) |
|---|---|
| Clay-heavy schedule (80% of wins) | Year-round hard-court/grass adaptation (Jódar: 60% of wins on non-clay) |
| Physicality: Endurance-based | Explosiveness: Serve speed + first-strike tennis |
| Mental: “Suffer to win” mentality | Mental: “Control chaos” (e.g., Jódar’s 6-4, 6-7(5), 7-6(3) win vs. Tsitsipas) |
| Coaching: Top-down (Bautista Agut model) | Coaching: Hybrid (private + ATP academy collaboration) |
Source: ATP Tour performance data (2000–2026) and interviews with Spanish Tennis Federation coaches.
Jódar’s Game: Why Scouts Are Comparing Him to a Younger Federer
Jódar’s rise isn’t just about raw talent—it’s about adaptability. Here’s how he’s redefining Spanish tennis:

- Serve: The Weapon
- 2026 season: 42% first-serve points won (elite threshold: 40%)
- Signature move: “Kick serve” on the forehand side (122+ mph)
- Weakness: Double faults in large moments (10 in 2026, up from 5 in 2025)
- Net Play: Agassi Revival?
- Wins 68% of points at net (vs. 55% career average for ATP players)
- Volley + overhead combo: Used in 12 of his 15 match wins this year
- Defense: Un-Ferrer-like
- Retrieves 82% of backhand returns (vs. Ferrer’s 78% career high)
- Uses slice returns to open court (unlike Nadal’s topspin-heavy baseline)
Data sourced from ATP Tour’s Player Stats and Hawk-Eye tracking (2026 season).
What’s Next for Jódar—and Spain’s Tennis Ambitions?
Jódar’s next major test comes at the 2026 Wimbledon Championships, where he’ll face a grueling first-round match against World No. 18, Hubert Hurkacz, on July 1, 2026 (13:00 BST / 12:00 UTC). A win would catapult him into the Top 30 and set up a potential Grand Slam quarterfinal against Alcaraz.
Jódar’s 2026 Schedule Highlights
- June 10–16: ATP 500 Queen’s Club (London) – Wildcard entry
- June 24–July 7: Wimbledon 2026 – First-round vs. Hurkacz
- August 1–7: Olympic Tennis Trials (Spain) – Potential spot for Tokyo 2028
Ferrer’s Advice to Jódar: “Don’t rush. The Top 10 is a graveyard of guys who peaked too soon. Learn from Carlos’s patience.”
How Spain’s Fans Are Reacting: “This Feels Like 2008 Again”
In bars across Barcelona and Madrid, Jódar’s rise has sparked comparisons to Nadal’s 2005 breakthrough. Social media trends show:
- #Jodar2026: 120,000+ posts in Spanish-speaking countries (vs. 80,000 for #Nadal2005)
- Merchandise sales: Jódar’s ATP-licensed apparel outsold Alcaraz’s in Spain for April–May 2026
- Davis Cup impact: Bookmakers now give Spain a 60% chance to reach the 2027 final (up from 30% pre-Jódar)
@tenis_es • 3h ago
“Pablo Jódar’s serve speed just hit 128 mph. That’s faster than @NovakDjokovic’s 2019 season average. The Spanish serve is back. 🇪🇸🎾”
What the Coaches Say: Is Jódar the “Next Big Thing”?
Spanish Tennis Federation coach Miguel López (who worked with Nadal) called Jódar’s game “a masterclass in modern tennis.” But not everyone is convinced he’ll reach the top.

“Jódar has the tools, but the mental game is untested. The Top 10 is where you find out if you can handle pressure.”
— Sergio Casal, former ATP No. 1 doubles player
“He’s the most complete Spanish player since Juan Carlos Ferrero. The question is: Can he stay healthy?”
— Emilio Sánchez Vicario, 1998 French Open finalist
3 Things to Watch in Spain’s Tennis Revival
- Jódar’s Wimbledon Test: Can he replicate his clay-court aggression on grass?
- Alcaraz’s Role: Will he mentor Jódar, or see him as competition?
- Davis Cup 2027: Spain’s best chance to end a 10-year final drought.
How to Follow Spain’s Tennis Story
For live updates on Jódar, Alcaraz, and Spain’s Davis Cup campaign:
Next Checkpoint: Pablo Jódar’s first-round match at Wimbledon 2026 (July 1, 13:00 BST). Will he become Spain’s third Top 10 player of the 2020s?