Is tennis' relentless nature causing injury crisis?
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🔴 LIVESports 29 Jun 2026 22:13 UTC 👁️ 15 views

Is tennis' relentless nature causing injury crisis?

The timing of Jack Draper voicing his concerns about the amount of injuries players suffer was either extremely unfortunate or subtly calculated. Less than 24 hours after saying he felt the volume of injuries was "pretty worrying", the Briton pulled out of Wimbledon with a long-standing arm problem. Former world number four Draper believes the demands placed on the top stars - a gruelling season with a short break, longer matches and more physical battles - are responsible for their bodies breaking down. Seven-time major champion Carlos Alcaraz is missing Wimbledon with a wrist injury, while several ATP players withdrew from grass-court events at Queen's and Eastbourne to protect their bodies. "When I look at the draws, everything is shoulder, arm, wrist [injuries]. They need to really take a close look at what we're doing on tour," Draper said. Draper's withdrawal came after fellow Briton Emma Raducanu was ruled out of playing with a stress fracture in her lower leg. The absence of the star home pair is undoubtedly a major blow to the tournament, but more importantly points to an increasingly worrying trend. "There are so many great players that everyone is pushing to find that extra 1% - spending more time on the court and in the gym," former world number one Tracy Austin told BBC Sport. "Some are playing more tournaments than is good for them, either mentally or physically. It is very, very demanding in all aspects." For players coming back from injuries, balancing the need for court time and the risk of aggravation is delicate. "It's so tough playing an individual sport. You can't be subbed out, you just have to be dunked back in the deep end immediately," former British player Naomi Broady said on BBC TV. "You can't go out and play 20 or 30 minutes and build up from there. You're just having to play day in day out for a week. "There's so much load on your body. If it's not the same injury it's a new one cropping up." Both Draper and Raducanu seem to have found that out to their cost. Draper, 24, had not played competitively for over two months before playing four matches at Eastbourne last week. He pulled out of Wimbledon - in what would have been his first Grand Slam of the season - when bone bruising in his serving arm flared up again. Raducanu, 23, believes overplaying at Queen's a fortnight ago contributed to a stress fracture in her lower right leg. The 2021 US Open champion played five matches in six days, having been out for most of the previous four months, and played a quarter-final, semi-final and final in the space of less than 30 hours because of previous rain delays. "It's so tough to allow time for injuries to heal and build that load up slowly when you do return," said Broady. "I think that's where most of the damage is re-done when you come back too quickly. That's why we say how relentless our sport is."

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