Carlos Alcaraz will not play at Roland Garros this year, and many are already starting to point fingers.
Alcarazâs absence is a huge loss for the sport, and his injury has left a big gap in the tournament. Itâs a blow for both fans and organisers, who will miss the buzz he brings every time he steps on court.
As the tennis world looks for answers, former Grand Slam champion Alex Corretja thinks the sport itself needs to have a hard look at its schedule.
Tennis told it must make a huge change soon
Appearing on Rai 2, Andrea Panatta called on the sport to step in and do more to protect players from injury.
âEveryone gets hurt here,â he began, emphasising the lose-lose nature of the current calendar.
âI want to appeal to the institutions that regulate tennis: injuries are multiplying at a very worrying rate, and this is very bad news for this sport.
âThe most striking case is obviously Alcarazâs injury, which will keep him out until Queenâs Club, that is, after Roland Garros.
âThe problem is that these players will all get hurt sooner or later, without exception. Todayâs game is very violent and subjects these guys to inhuman physical strain.
âNow, Iâm not saying we need to go back to my time because we must always move forward. But if they donât stop playing so much sooner or later they will all get hurt because this hysterical pace cannot be maintained for long.
Alcaraz has received plenty of support from fellow players since pulling out of the French Open. Sinner spoke about his withdrawal along with others who have reached out with similar messages of encouragement for him during his recovery period.
Alcarazâs injury puts spotlight back on overloaded schedule
The busy tour calendar may have played a role in Carlos Alcarazâs injury, but itâs the structure of the tennis season that left him with so few good options in the first place.
Scheduling should never put players in a position where they feel pressured to jump from one event to another just to keep pace. Built-in protections are needed.
If someone at Alcarazâs level is feeling the effects of it, what hope do others lower down the rankings have?
Most players arenât working with the same support teams or earning similar appearance fees, so asking them to play through similar conditions isnât reasonable. And even for Alcaraz, it clearly wasnât manageable this time around.
The quick turnaround between Monte Carlo and Barcelona left little time for recovery, and he ended up paying for it physically. It wasnât just an unfortunate accident; it was a risk built into the schedule.
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