Alex de Minaur wants season shortened as event after event takes its toll at French Open
Alex de Minaur joined a growing chorus of tennis stars calling for change to a packed schedule, declaring there's too much tennis after his defeat left Alexei Popyrin the lone Aussie male in the draw at Roland Garros.
While new Australian Daria Kasatkina continued to fly the flag and marched into the third round, Queenslander Adam Walton also suffered a straight-sets second-round defeat.
After a five-set battle with Alexander Bublik that again cruelled de Minaur's grand slam dream, the Australian No.1 criticised the 'gruelling' schedule that demanded too much of players and said it was 'not normal'.
'No-one's got a solution,' he said after his 2-6 2-6 6-4 6-3 6-2 loss.
'But the solution is simple: you shorten the schedule, right?
'What's not normal is that for the last three, four years I've had two days off after the Davis Cup and I've gone straight into pre-season, straight into the new season again,' said de Minaur of the gruelling program that kicked off with the United Cup in December, 33 days after the Davis Cup finals ended.
'Once you start, you don't finish until November 24, so it's never-ending. The way it's structured … I had to deal with that. I'm still dealing with that right now.
'The solution is you shorten because what's going to happen is players' careers are going to get shorter and shorter because they're just going to burn out mentally. There's just too much tennis.'
De Minaur's call came after countryman Jordan Thompson described the ATP schedule as 'sh*t' and 'just a joke' after detailing the injuries he had been playing with.
Kasatkina, now playing under the Australian flag after defecting from Russia, easily accounted for local hope Leolia Jeanjean.
She remains the only Australian woman in the draw at Roland Garros and will next play Spanish 10th seed Paula Badosa in the third round.
Walton, who had made it through to the second round at the French Open for the first time, revealed he was also battling an arm injury after his loss to Andrey Rublev.
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A frustrated Alcaraz kicked his bench during the second set but finally found a way through Musetti's dogged defence to draw level after a tiebreak and then produced a dazzling display of power and precision to dish out a bagel in the third set. Musetti, who appeared to be hampered by a left thigh issue midway through the third set, threw in the towel after two games in the fourth. "The first two sets were tough. I had chances to be up in the match but couldn't make the most of them," Alcaraz added. "When I won the second set, I was relieved and I knew that I needed to be aggressive and be myself. I was calmer. I could see clearer and I could play great tennis at the start of the third. "I'm feeling great physically. It's been three intense weeks but I have one more step to take. I'm playing great tennis and I have great confidence. I've been doing great things in this tournament and now is the time to give 100 per cent in the final." Alcaraz said he would tune into the second semi-final on Court Philippe Chatrier to watch world No.1 Jannik Sinner take on 24-time Grand Slam champion Novak Djokovic and study his opponent for Sunday's final. "I'm not going to miss tonight's match, it's one of the best we can have right now, Sinner against Djokovic," he said. "I'm going to watch it and enjoy it and take tactics from the match." Defending champion Carlos Alcaraz has reached back-to-back French Open finals after Italian eighth seed Lorenzo Musetti retired with injury while trailing 4-6 7-6 (7-3) 6-0 2-0. Alcaraz is attempting to become only the third man to retain his Roland Garros title this century, after Rafa Nadal and Gustavo Kuerten, "It's never great to go through like this," Alcaraz said, before hailing Musetti's achievement of reaching at least the semi-finals of all four elite claycourt events this year. "He's a great player, he has had an incredible claycourt season ... 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I could see clearer and I could play great tennis at the start of the third. "I'm feeling great physically. It's been three intense weeks but I have one more step to take. I'm playing great tennis and I have great confidence. I've been doing great things in this tournament and now is the time to give 100 per cent in the final." Alcaraz said he would tune into the second semi-final on Court Philippe Chatrier to watch world No.1 Jannik Sinner take on 24-time Grand Slam champion Novak Djokovic and study his opponent for Sunday's final. "I'm not going to miss tonight's match, it's one of the best we can have right now, Sinner against Djokovic," he said. "I'm going to watch it and enjoy it and take tactics from the match." Defending champion Carlos Alcaraz has reached back-to-back French Open finals after Italian eighth seed Lorenzo Musetti retired with injury while trailing 4-6 7-6 (7-3) 6-0 2-0. 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It's been three intense weeks but I have one more step to take. I'm playing great tennis and I have great confidence. I've been doing great things in this tournament and now is the time to give 100 per cent in the final." Alcaraz said he would tune into the second semi-final on Court Philippe Chatrier to watch world No.1 Jannik Sinner take on 24-time Grand Slam champion Novak Djokovic and study his opponent for Sunday's final. "I'm not going to miss tonight's match, it's one of the best we can have right now, Sinner against Djokovic," he said. "I'm going to watch it and enjoy it and take tactics from the match."

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