Most Popular Sports
All Sports
Show All

Casper Ruud: Liverpool-style burnout? 'Small margins'? What's behind star's dip in form after Indian Wells loss?

James Walker-Roberts

Published 14/03/2023 at 08:39 GMT

Casper Ruud made two Grand Slam finals in 2022 but this season has a 3-5 win-loss record. Why has the world No. 4's form dipped so far this season? Ruud, 24, had a short off-season following a Latin American tour with Rafael Nadal and was beaten early at the Australian Open. At Indian Wells he won his opening match before losing to qualifier Cristian Garin in the next round.

Highlights: Garin stuns third seed Ruud in straight-sets victory at Indian Wells

Casper Ruud has been within touching distance of getting to world No. 1 over the last six months.
First at the 2022 US Open, when Ruud could have got to the top of the rankings if he had beaten Carlos Alcaraz in the final, and then at the Australian Open, when he needed to make the final to have a chance of replacing Alcaraz as No. 1.
Neither worked out for Ruud – and not much has gone his way this year either.
Coming off the back of a hugely successful 2022 season that saw him reach two Grand Slam finals on different surfaces (French Open and US Open), qualify for the Nitto ATP Finals and get to No. 2 in the world rankings, Ruud is yet to win back-to-back matches this year.
In trying to find reasons why, the obvious first one is potential burnout.
Ruud has played a lot of tennis over the last two years – 73 matches in 2022, 76 in 2021. Those numbers are similar to players around Ruud’s age and ranking like Stefanos Tsitsipas and Andrey Rublev, but are far higher than Ruud’s previous totals (35 matches in 2020, which was disrupted by Covid-19, and 42 in 2019). Ruud also tacked on a two-week, five-match Latin American exhibition tour with Rafael Nadal at the end of his 2022 season.
Just days after facing off at the Nitto ATP Finals in Turin on November 17, Ruud and Nadal travelled to Argentina together. They played in Buenos Aires before also meeting in Brazil, Ecuador, Colombia and Mexico, where they played their final contest on December 1.
The tour meant that Ruud had limited pre-season training before heading to Auckland, where as the top seed he lost in the first round, and then to the Australian Open, where his hopes of getting to world No. 1 were ended in the second round by Jenson Brooksby.
Asked after the loss to Brooksby if the Latin American tour perhaps “wasn't the best preparation for the Australian Open”, Ruud said: “I'm not sure. I mean, it's very easy to sit here now and say that was bad for maybe both Rafa and I due to the fact that we lost early here.
“At the same time, I see no reason why we couldn't have a good Australian Open or made better results down here. I think it's coincidental sometimes.
“I think I have realised that there are, in my eyes, so many players on tour these days that you will have chance to beat, and there's a chance you will lose to many players on tour.
“The margins are small these days, and I just realised that, you know, even though I don't feel like a worse player or that I'm in physically worse shape than I was during the US Open, for example. There I made the final; here I lost second round. That's how it is sometimes.”
Ruud said after the Australian Open he planned to take a break and that the length of the tennis season was “not really healthy for the body at all”. He didn’t play again until the end of February at the Mexican Open, where he won in three sets against world No. 311 Guido Andreozzi before losing to Taro Daniel, who had previously been 0-8 against players ranked in the top 10.
Ruud made 46 unforced errors in his defeat to Daniel, and then produced 29 as he suffered another surprise loss in the third round of Indian Wells against qualifier Cristian Garin.
picture

Watch top five shots from final as Nadal beats Ruud to seal 14th French Open title

The Miami Open now looms large for Ruud.
Having made the final last year, Ruud has 600 points to defend at the tournament so another quick exit could see him slip down the rankings. He will also be keen to rediscover his best form before the clay, which, despite his hard court success over the last year, is still the surface where he has had most of his best results. If he does lose early in Miami it will be another chance to regroup and recover after an off-season that Ruud might not be repeating in a hurry.
“It was maybe not enough to be able to perform well here this year,” he acknowledged about his off-season plans at the Australian Open.
“So it will be considered by me and my team what we will do in December this year, and if this was the right way to prepare for Australian Open or not, who knows?
“Maybe it looks like it was not the right way, but there are many factors that come into play. I mean, let's see, but yeah, I have done what I felt was the right preparation but wasn't able to perform and win as many matches as I hoped here this year.”
The positives for Ruud going forward are that against Garin and Daniel he showed plenty of fight. If, as he said in Melbourne, the “margins are small”, then they may soon turn back in his favour. Plus, when will the opportunity to tour with Nadal ever come up again? Maybe never. And aside from making the French Open final last year, Ruud didn’t have a super strong clay season, so he has a chance to make up ranking points across several events, including Monte Carlo and Madrid.
Ruud’s position feels similar in some ways to Liverpool’s burnout following their quadruple-chasing efforts in 2021/22. Jurgen Klopp’s side have struggled to hit the same heights as they did a year ago, and only now are showing signs of rediscovering themselves. How long will it take for Ruud to return his best?
- - -
Stream the 2023 French Open live on discovery+, the Eurosport app and at eurosport.com
Join 3M+ users on app
Stay up to date with the latest news, results and live sports
Download
Share this article
Advertisement
Advertisement