National Post (National Edition)

Too many injuries, not enough stars

SOME QUESTION NUMBER OF EVENTS TENNIS PLAYERS REQUIRED TO ATTEND

- CHRISTOPHE­R CLAREY The New York Times

For a non-contact sport, tennis has long had a high attrition rate. The grind of the internatio­nal travel and the extended rallies often adds up to trouble.

But there has never been a season quite like this in modern men’s tennis: one where so many leading players have failed to reach the finish line.

“To me it doesn’t set off a red light; it sets off a yellow light,” said Paul Annacone, a former pro who later coached Pete Sampras, Tim Henman and Roger Federer. “Let’s see if it continues. I think it’s been one of those years, but if it goes into 2018, then I would start to go, ‘What is happening? What are we doing? Is it the physicalit­y? The heaviness of the balls? The length of the season?’”

No major course correction­s are in the offing, but there is no doubt it’s not a good look when so much star power is missing from the year’s final Masters 1000 event, the Paris Masters, which begins Monday and is supposed to be mandatory for the men’s elite.

“It’s definitely disconcert­ing; you can’t be Pollyanna about it,” said Justin Gimelstob, an analyst and member of the ATP Tour’s board of directors.

Seven members of the Top 20 have already ended their seasons, including the three men who loomed largest in 2016: Novak Djokovic, Andy Murray and Stan Wawrinka. None of the three has played an official match since Wimbledon.

Djokovic, who played in 51 straight Grand Slam tournament­s and won 12, has not competed since retiring in the quarter-finals at Wimbledon in early July with chronic elbow pain against Tomas Berdych.

Berdych was experienci­ng back pain of his own in that match and made it to Oct. 19 before calling it a season. Nick Kyrgios, never the most durable of young tennis stars, issued a season-ending statement on Twitter later the same day, citing the recurrence of a hip injury.

The inactive list goes on, including Kei Nishikori of Japan, who is out with a right wrist injury, and Canada’s Milos Raonic, last year’s Wimbledon finalist, who ended his injury-filled season this month after retiring in the second round of Tokyo with a calf problem. Raonic’s latest misfortune came after making it clear he favoured systemic change, pointing out that none of last year’s final Top 5 played in this year’s U.S. Open.

“Maybe it’s a testament to some kind of reform being needed for the sake of players’ careers, and being able to provide a certain calibre of tennis for spectators,” Raonic said in Tokyo. “Give the players that really stand out mandatory events, give them a chance to play everything within a seven-month period so they can really focus on themselves health-wise, but also on improving, because you need that time. We’re the only sport, outside of golf maybe, that plays as spread out as we do without any time for rest.”

The counterpoi­nt to this, is the same small group — Federer, Rafael Nadal, Djokovic and to a lesser degree Murray and Wawrinka — endured and ruled men’s tennis for nearly a decade, dominating not only at the Grand Slam tournament­s but at the Masters 1000 level.

Two of them — Nadal, 31, and Federer, 36 — are back on top this year after ending their seasons early in 2016, giving everybody else ideas.

“What these players have been able to do, the consistenc­y and success they’ve enjoyed at the biggest events on tour over such a sustained period, has been unpreceden­ted,” Chris Kermode, executive chairman and president of the ATP, said in an email. “At some point that takes a toll on the body, especially given the physicalit­y of men’s profession­al tennis, and that is evident today.”

It’s not just great players in their 30s suffering, however. Nishikori is 27, Raonic is 26, Kyrgios is 22.

“Injury trends and player playing patterns need to be assessed across multiple years,” Kermode said. “Our data shows that the number of registered injuries across the whole player group has been reasonably flat in the last three years.”

But the trend has been disquietin­gly upward among the tour elite. The question is whether the Federer-Nadal template will work for their rivals. Djokovic and Wawrinka already announced plans to play an exhibition in Abu Dhabi in late December as part of their preparatio­n for the Australian Open in 2018, the year’s first Grand Slam tournament.

Murray, who has had recurring hip problems, has resumed practicing.

“I think there is a correlatio­n between players seeing what Roger and Rafa did and then coming back and having two dominant years,” Gimelstob said. “It’s a copycat business, all of it, whether it’s basketball, analytics or moneyball in baseball. People see others having success, and they imitate it. I think the trend factor is real here.”

But if the trend for star injuries continues in 2018, substantiv­e change, such as revamping the ranking system or reducing playing obligation­s, will be hard to resist.

The ATP already has made concession­s to human frailty: slightly shortening the season, reducing finals of Masters 1000 events to bestof-three sets; adding byes in ATP 250 events and granting exemptions from some mandatory playing requiremen­ts for veterans who have hit certain benchmarks, including 600 career tour matches.

The tour has nearly doubled the number of physiother­apists it employs since 2013 and continues to offer an injury prevention screening program to players.

But there may be new demands on top players with the success of last month’s new Laver Cup, a team event set to take place over three days every September in non-Olympic years, and with the continued interest in reviving the World Team Cup.

“I love the saying, you can only put 10 pounds of stuff in a 10-pound bag,” said Craig Boynton, who coaches Americans Sam Querrey and Steve Johnson. “What will happen if these events are successful is that they will be put in players’ schedules and other things will be knocked out.”

Players, eager to maximize their shining moments in a Darwinian sport, have not always been the best judges of their own limits, however. For now, the yellow light is definitely flashing.

 ??  ?? MATT ROBERTS / GETTY IMAGES Canada’s Milos Raonic, who saw his season end early because of injury, has been outspoken in saying tennis needs to change the way it build its tournament schedule.
MATT ROBERTS / GETTY IMAGES Canada’s Milos Raonic, who saw his season end early because of injury, has been outspoken in saying tennis needs to change the way it build its tournament schedule.

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