Zverev’s conspiracy theory: tennis’ powers are slowing hard courts for Sincaraz
Alexander Zverev is tired of slow hard courts, and heβs not shy about admitting it either. The third-ranked German expressed his views on the matter after his win over Valentin Royer in Shanghai.

He even pointed his finger at the two-headed monster at the top of the ATP rankings, insinuating that tours are tailoring court speed to the strengths of Carlos Alcaraz and Jannik Sinner.
βI hate when itβs the same, to be honest,β Zverev noted. βI think the tournament directors are going towards that direction because, obviously, they want Jannik (Sinner) and Carlos (Alcaraz) to do well every tournament, and thatβs what they prefer.
βNowadays, you can play almost the same way on every surface. I donβt like it. Iβm not a fan of it. I think tennis needs different game styles, tennis needs a little bit of variety, and I think weβre lacking that right now.β
Interesting to credit Alcaraz and Sinner with responsibility for a trend that has been in motion for a few decades. Wimbledon slowed its playing surfaces in the early 2000s, switching to a different seed that allowed for a higher bounce, in an effort to introduce more rallies into the grass court game.
The publicβs love affair with the grinding rallies of the Nadal-Djokovic rivalry also played a role. Serve-and-volley tennis has been on the out for a while now, and shot tolerance has become the new buzzword in the sport.Β
Roger Federer gave his take during Laver Cup, when he breached the subject with Andy Roddick on the American’s podcast.
βI understand the safety net that the tournament directors see, making the surface slower, because the weaker player, he has to hit extra-amazing shots to beat Sinner, whereas if itβs quick, he can only maybe blast a few at the right time and he gets past,” Federer said.
βSo thatβs when the tournament directors, theyβre like βAhhh I kind of like having Sinner and Alcaraz in the final.ββ
Perhaps Sinner and Alcarazβs rise gives the powers that be another reason to prolong the trend by keeping court speeds slower but, as Sinner says, it isnβt up to him what speed each tournament chooses for his hard courts.
Sinner was asked about Zverevβs comments following his 6-3, 6-3 defeat of Daniel Altmaier.
βMe and Carlos, we donβt make the courts,β he said. βItβs not our decision. We try to adapt ourselves in every situation. I feel like every week is still a bit different. Iβve played some great tennis even on faster courts. But Iβm not making the courts, so I just try to adapt and play my best tennis, and thatβs it.β













2 comments