Carlos Alcaraz defends exhibition events as relief from tour grind

World number one Carlos Alcaraz has defended his decision to play in the lucrative Six Kings Slam exhibition event in Saudi Arabia after previously saying he would consider skipping ATP Tour events to prioritise his health due to a crowded schedule.

Carlos Alcaraz of Spain is taking part in the Six Kings Slam exhibition event in Saudi Arabia. Picture: NOUSHAD THEKKAYIL/EPA.
Carlos Alcaraz of Spain is taking part in the Six Kings Slam exhibition event in Saudi Arabia. Picture: NOUSHAD THEKKAYIL/EPA.

World number one Carlos Alcaraz has defended his decision to play in the lucrative Six Kings Slam exhibition event in Saudi Arabia after previously saying he would consider skipping ATP Tour events to prioritise his health due to a crowded schedule.

The men’s and women’s circuits, which run across 11 months with extended formats at several tournaments, have come under fresh scrutiny during the “Asian swing”, where extreme heat and humidity contributed to a spate of injuries and withdrawals.

The Professional Tennis Players’ Association filed a lawsuit against the sport’s governing bodies in March, calling the scheduling situation unsustainable.

After winning the Tokyo title in September despite playing with an ankle injury, Alcaraz withdrew from the next event in Shanghai, saying he needed time to recover.

His decision to play in the Six Kings Slam, which offers a reported $1.5m (R26m) in appearance money with a winner’s cheque of $6m (R104m), stoked plenty of criticism from fans.

“It’s a different format, different situation playing exhibitions than official tournaments, 15-16 days in a row, having such a high focus and demanding physically,” six-time Grand Slam winner Alcaraz said.

“We are just having fun for one or two days and playing some tennis, and that’s great and why we choose the exhibitions.”

Last year’s champion, Jannik Sinner, is also playing in the Riyadh exhibition event after the world number two’s early exit in Shanghai due to cramp.

“I understand [the criticism], but sometimes people don’t understand us, our opinions,” Alcaraz added.

“It’s not really demanding mentally [compared to] when we're having such long events like two weeks or two-and-a-half weeks.”

Alcaraz, who received a bye to the semifinals, said his ankle had still not fully recovered.

“I don’t feel 100% and the doubts are there when I’m moving on court, but it has improved a lot and I am going to compete and perform well in the Six Kings Slam,” he said.

Reuters

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