Top-ranked Carlos Alcaraz pulled out of the Australian Open on Friday due to an injured proper leg.
The 19-year-old from Spain wrote on social media that he bought damage “through a chance, unnatural movement in training.”
The yr’s first Grand Slam match begins on January 16 at Melbourne Park. The draw is subsequent Thursday.
Alcaraz received the US Open final September and moved atop the ATP rankings. That allowed him to turn into the youngest man to complete a season at No. 1 for the reason that computerised males’s tennis rankings started a half-century in the past.
His rise from No. 32 on the finish of 2021 additionally marked the most important single-season soar to No. 1.
This is his second vital setback in current months, although. Alcaraz lower quick final season in November after tearing an stomach muscle whereas competing on the Paris Masters. That compelled him to withdraw from the ATP Finals and Davis Cup Finals.
Still, he closed out 2022 with a report of 57-13 and 5 singles titles.
“I’d worked so hard to get to my best level for Australia but unfortunately I won’t be able to play” at a tuneup occasion in Kooyong or the yr’s first Grand Slam match, Alcaraz wrote on Twitter.
“It’s tough, but I have to be optimistic, recover and look forward,” he stated.
With Alcaraz out, No. 2 Rafael Nadal — the defending champion in Australia and proprietor of a males’s-record 22 Grand Slam titles — will transfer as much as No. 1 within the seedings for the hard-court match.
The Spaniards grew to become the primary gamers from the identical nation to assert the highest two spots within the ATP on the shut of a season since Americans Pete Sampras and Michael Chang in 1996.
Alcaraz’s departure additionally removes a possible hurdle for Novak Djokovic as he returns to Australia and tries to win it for a tenth time to assert what can be his twenty second main championship total. Djokovic missed the 2022 Australian Open after being deported from the nation as a result of he was not vaccinated towards COVID-19. He remains to be not vaccinated, however restrictions have eased.