The Rafa Nadal Academy plans to open a tennis center in Porto Belo (Brazil) by the end of 2028. The concept includes 17 courts, padel facilities and training following the Nadal method. A gain for Mallorca as well.
Rafa Nadal Academy Opens Tennis Center in Brazil – a Mallorca Success Goes Overseas
Rafa Nadal’s tennis project continues to expand: a new Rafa Nadal Tennis Center is being built in Porto Belo on the South American coast and is scheduled for completion by the end of 2028. It will be part of a larger resort and residential development with hotels, golf areas and additional sports facilities. Planned are seventeen tennis courts – including nine outdoor courts, seven indoor courts and a center court – as well as eight padel courts, a café, a shop and a fitness area. Training will follow the so-called Nadal methodology and the offer is aimed at all age groups.
For us in Mallorca this is not an abstract expansion but rather a confirmation: the Rafa Nadal brand has established itself here and is growing internationally. Existing academies are already located, among others, on Mallorca, in Marbella and in Mexico. The addition of South America now is an invitation to network: exchange of coaching knowledge, joint camps and perhaps even friendly tournaments between Palma and Porto Belo are conceivable.
On a November morning in Palma, on the Passeig Marítim, one notices developments like these. Conversations at the café table are not only about the weather or the ferries to Alcúdia, but often about training methods, youth development and how boys and girls on the island can gain better prospects. The ball rolls on the court in Son Servera just as it does in Portixol, and the question of whether young talents will one day train under the flag of an international academy preoccupies parents and coaches alike.
Why this is good for Mallorca may sound more banal than it is: an internationally visible academy with multiple locations strengthens the island’s reputation as a tennis destination. That attracts tournaments, coaches and interested families. For local clubs this can mean additional impetus – not in the form of competition, but through cooperation, training courses and know-how transfer. Also: anyone who has seen the infrastructure of a Nadal Academy knows that behind professional training there is also a certain organizational strength from which smaller clubs can benefit.
Of course, every expansion also brings work and questions: will coaches be exchanged, how will qualifications be handled, and what role will regional partners on site play? No roadmap has been published yet, but the sober announcement “completion by the end of 2028” gives enough time to build bridges. Mallorcans who are training or already working in tennis could benefit from internships, observations or even job offers if networks between the locations are created.
A small scene from everyday life: in the parking lot of the club in Santa Ponsa three teenagers load their rackets into the car. They talk about a possible training camp next summer, about what it would be like to have a coach from an international academy. Such conversations show that the idea does not remain abstract but reaches those who live the sport.
The view towards Porto Belo is therefore also a look ahead for Mallorca. Not because everything will suddenly be better here, but because additional connections open new paths: exchange programs, joint tournament formats or training trips for junior players. For those who want more from rallies than just a holiday sport, such an international network can open doors.
And in the end there remains a personal, almost banal consolation: when we sit on the Paseo on a windless evening and someone talks about Nadal, we know that something from here is visible beyond the island. That is a small piece of pride for Mallorca – and an idea that can motivate young players to keep going.
Read, researched, and newly interpreted for you: Source
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