It wasn’t so long ago that the buzz in tennis was that, age-wise, “30 is the new 20.” Led by the Big Three, but including players like Fernando Verdasco, Feliciano Lopez and even “Dr. Ivo” Karlovic, these veterans were still belting out winners in their late 30s.
Given the fitness level of those players, was 40 destined to be the “new 30?”
It seemed a preposterous idea—and it was. Last year at Wimbledon, the average age of the final four men, despite the presence of 37-year old Novak Djokovic, was 27. That’s right in the developmental sweet spot. The champion Carlos Alcaraz was 21, and semifinalist Lorenzo Mussetti was 22.
But the recent success of this youth uprising (the cohort also includes Jannik Sinner, Jack Draper, Jakub Mensik and new sensation Joao Fonseca) has a darker side. Some of the more consistent players, stalwarts who had challenged and occasionally toppled the Big Three+ opponents, may be struggling with burnout—or something akin to it.