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Saudi deal: Will Spain forgive Rafael Nadal for breaking its heart?

"Is it clear now who Rafa Nadal is?"

It's a question that fans of the tennis star have been asking on social media, after the announcement that Spain's favourite sporting son has inked a deal to become a 'tennis ambassador' for Saudi Arabia. 

Nadal signed an agreement with the oil-rich Arab country to "promote the development of the sport", but more than his actions, it was the statement he made that left Spaniards speechless: "Wherever you look, you can see growth and progress here".

"Money buys everything?" supporters asked at first, criticising the lack of human rights in the Gulf State. Now the debate has moved on from social networks to office corridors, cafeterias and Whatsapp groups.

"I read the news at night and thought I was so tired I must have misread it, but the next day I saw it was true. The first thing I thought was: why did he sell himself? He's got a lot of money and he's won everything, he didn't need it," Jaime, from Madrid, whose idol has always been Nadal, told Euronews.

"It was such a hard blow that we could start counting the years from this moment: the first year since Rafa was sold," he adds.

Newspapers have also been filled with letters lamenting Nadal's decision. "I don't understand the need to sell out like this, but I don't blame him either: when it comes to large sums of money, dignity and honour disappear," wrote Pablo Erskine from Alcorcón in El País.

"Is it really worth sacrificing principles for a few million more?"

Gonzalo discussed this with his colleagues during a coffee break at the bank he works for in London. "It's hard to be objective because for me Nadal is God, but it's clear that this is not the best thing he could have done".

There are those who wonder why Spain's most popular

Read more on euronews.com