Jannik Sinner spoke out against persistent scheduling issues in tennis after advancing at the Mutua Madrid Open on Tuesday, the world No. 1 calling out potential quarterfinal opponent Rafael Jodar’s near-1 a.m. finish Monday morning against Joao Fonseca.
“I feel like we need to make some adjustments to the scheduling of the day,” Sinner said after winning a 25th straight Masters 1000 match, defeating No. 19 seed Cameron Norrie, 6-2, 7-5. “The matches end very late even though they have one day between. It’s still very, very late to finish at 1:30. You need to eat and have treatment, so that’s very late. We try to adapt ourselves, our bodies and minds.”
Tennis instituted new scheduling guidelines ahead of the 2025 season in an effort to reduce the number of matches finishing after midnight, including a new rule that prevents matches from starting after 11 p.m. without approval from the tours and the tournament supervisor. Jodar’s win over Fonseca, a fellow rising star, took just over two hours to complete.
To ensure Jodar had maximum recovery time, tournament organizers scheduled the 19-year-old’s fourth-round match against Vit Kopriva at 4 p.m., leading to a rare 11 a.m. assignment for Sinner, who is into his second career quarterfinal in Madrid.
