Players call for consistency in tennis balls amid injury concerns
An injured Carlos Alcaraz receives treatment during his loss against Novak Djokovic in the semifinal of the singles competition on Court Philippe Chatrier during the 2023 French Open Tennis Tournament at Roland Garros, Paris, France, June 9, 2023. (Getty Images Photo)


Leading up to the Australian Open, Novak Djokovic, the defending champion, encountered discomfort in his right wrist – an undesirable situation for a tennis player whose primary racket swings involve that arm.

Cam Norrie, the tournament's 19th-seeded player, is grappling with wrist pain, much like Brenda Fruhvirtova, one of three 16-year-olds who advanced to the second round of the women's bracket at Melbourne Park.

Djokovic, Norrie and Fruhvirtova were not quick to attribute the ever-changing types of tennis balls used year-round at the sport's highest levels to their issues, but they were not necessarily ready to absolve that concern completely either.

For some time, certain players have openly wondered whether their wrists, elbows, shoulders and other body parts involved in propelling rackets to strike shots at speeds regularly exceeding 100 mph (150 kph) are at greater risk due to the constant need to adapt to projectiles that vary in weight, speed, fluffiness, or consistency compared to the ones they were hitting a week or two or three earlier.

The WTA and ATP professional tours are finally ready to look into the matter, announcing right before this week's start of the year's first Grand Slam tournament that they are conducting "a strategic review" of tennis balls, although they don't envision any changes before 2025.

"I hope they can figure it out. It seems pretty far away," said 2016 Wimbledon runner-up Milos Raonic. "It seems like they're kind of kicking the can down the road."

Taylor Fritz, a 26-year-old from California who was the highest-seeded American man in Melbourne at No. 12, is among those harboring concerns. He said when the ATP asks male players at the end of each season what they think can be improved about the sport, he always mentions the fluctuations among the fuzzy tennis balls.

"When I was younger ... (I) didn't get injured too easily. I've been really feeling it," Fritz said.

"It's not so much like the specific ball that injures us. In some cases, it is. But it's more just: You get used to one, and then when you change to something that's a bit heavier, your wrist or your elbow or whatever is taking the force," he explained.

"Everyone is different. Everyone hits the ball differently – grips, all that stuff. Whatever is taking the force is now not trained to take that. It's been trained to take maybe a lighter ball. So it's just all the switching; it causes problems."

According to the WTA, most injuries on its tour over the past four years have been to the foot (17%) or thigh (13%). Wrist or shoulder injuries follow and account for a combined 18.5%.

Ten brands of tennis balls – and 19 distinct types – were used across the WTA in 2023. A similar number of brands popped up around the ATP.

"Imagine the NBA using that many kinds of basketballs ... or the NHL using that many kinds of pucks ... or the NFL using that many kinds of footballs ... or Major League Baseball using that many kinds of baseballs during one of their seasons ... or FIFA using that many different types of soccer balls during one World Cup. They don't, of course; each sticks to one brand.

"I just try and play with what I'm given," British tennis player Katie Boulter said. "It does change week by week."

One significant difference between tennis and other sports is that surfaces change, prompting ball changes. The Australian Open is contested on hard courts, the U.S. Open is on another sort of hard courts, the French Open is on clay, and Wimbledon is on grass.

Some players, such as two-time major champion Carlos Alcaraz, want consistency within each portion of the season, but right now, each tournament chooses its own ball supplier or sponsor – money, as is often the case in the world of sports, talks.

Fritz and Alcaraz noted that events during the lead-in to last year's U.S. Open went with four different balls in four weeks.

Fritz and others, such as two-time Australian Open champion Victoria Azarenka, pointed to one possible compromise: a universal ball that would vary its branding from week to week.

"If you ask me, 'Oh, should we change the balls?' Yeah, absolutely," Azarenka said. "We should have similar consistency."