Netflix’s ‘Carlos Alcaraz: My Way’ series shows a tennis star surrounded by a bad team

As someone who follows tennis, I’ve been irritated in recent years by the packaging around the sport’s new “bright star,” Carlos Alcaraz. Alcaraz is Spanish, turning 22 years old on Cinco de Mayo, and he’s already won four major titles: two Wimbledon titles, a Roland Garros title and a Us Open title. He also won the silver medal at the Paris Olympics, losing to Novak Djokovic in the gold-medal match. Alcaraz is genuinely charming, on and off court, but the packaging around him often feels inorganic, like everyone just decided that Carlos was That Guy and immediately began to build him up as the next Rafa/Roger/Novak. It feels the same way with Jannik Sinner, although it feels even more inorganic in Sinner’s case.

Well, Alcaraz and his team put together a three-part Netflix docuseries called Carlos Alcaraz: My Way. I’ve watched it this week and it has me feeling so sorry for Alcaraz, honestly. His family sent him off to a tennis academy when he was very young, and then he turned pro when he was 15/16. Everything was built up around him – his coaching team, his management team, almost all of the same people around him since he was 16 years old, all of the same people who are used to telling him where to go, what to say, how to behave and how to play.

Some of the most disturbing moments in the series come when he’s clearly dealing with injuries. His team – entirely made up of middle-aged men – tell him to push through the pain and keep playing. They keep telling him that the biggest problem isn’t his injury-prone “glass” body, it’s his mind, and that he shouldn’t be scared to play through the pain (even if he could be doing real damage to his body). They freak out every single time Alcaraz wants to take a break or rest his body. They freak out whenever he wants to party for a few days after winning a major title. They freak out every time he suggests that his priority is to enjoy his life and tennis at the same time.

While all of that is honestly appalling, it’s even worse than that. The men around Alcaraz are so relentlessly joyless that they cannot understand why Alcaraz would even want to celebrate winning back-to-back Wimbledon titles or his third major at the age of 21. Everyone believes that Alcaraz and Sinner are the “replacements” for the Big Three (Djokovic, Nadal and Federer), and so Alcaraz’s team uses the Big Three as the template for Alcaraz’s career. It’s like they’re mad at him for not having twenty Slams already. It’s like they can’t understand why Alcaraz would even celebrate his third Slam when he’s on this grim, robotic path to win 25 Slams.

This series has really made me hope that Alcaraz understands that the people he had around him at 16 are possibly not built for his long-term career. That part hasn’t come to him yet though – while he’s getting old enough to say “no” to his team and do things “his way,” I don’t think he understands that he’s old enough to surround himself with different people, and that he can actually hire and fire people. There’s absolutely a part of him where he just wants to be home with his family and friends and not have to worry about all of the “business of tennis.” He’s kept the same team around him because he doesn’t want to deal with it, because he prefers the same set up he had six years ago. But everyone grows up eventually, and I have high hopes that he will understand that staff shake-ups are necessary.

The same week this Netflix series came out, Alcaraz withdrew from the Madrid Open because of an adductor tear in his right leg, which he got playing in Barcelona last week. As I said, he has a glass body – he needs a team made up of people who will tell him that these injuries are not all in his head.

Photos courtesy of Netflix.

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18 Responses to “Netflix’s ‘Carlos Alcaraz: My Way’ series shows a tennis star surrounded by a bad team”

  1. kayfree says:

    I watched it and felt awful for him. Ferrero treats him like a child and has zero regard for his well being. The trainer and physio are clearly focused on his ability to win rather than his health and pain. The only person who seemed to care about him as a human being was his mom, but she wasn’t giving him much good advice. The only actual decent, caring advice he got during the whole thing was from Federer. It made me sad. He deserves better and I hope he advocates for himself more.

      • kayfree says:

        I also wonder if the “glass body” problem isn’t down to how badly they overtrained him as a child. They were so proud of how they transformed his body but oblivious to the physical toll it’s so clearly taken! And Ferrero never did that to himself.

    • liz says:

      I haven’t seen this yet, but I hope that Federer or Rafa or Andy Murray, particularly since they are now retired, can sit down with Alcaraz and help him get control of his life. Before these guys who see him as nothing but a paycheck for themselves destroy him.

  2. ThatGirlThere says:

    Middle aged men destroy everything they come in contact with.

  3. FYI says:

    While he was winning those Slams, I noticed that he kept co-dependently looking at his box — like after every. single. point. I mean, to the extent that it was really odd. Yes, modern players have a team, but tennis is still a sport that is 1 on 1 out there on the court. It’s YOU who has to make the decisions and hit the ball.
    He seemed very controlled by others even back then — to me anyway. He seems sweet; I hope he finds what works for him.

    • SarahCS says:

      I haven’t watched it (yet) but it sounds like some echos of people who get really famous young and their emotional development stops at that point. I hope he can grow and find his independence as this seems like a recipe for a successful but short career. The human body can only take so much.

  4. Blogger says:

    A lot of people are relying on him – money-wise – but they are slowly killing the goose that laid the golden egg.

    • kayfree says:

      He’s surrounded by these men, including his dad, who openly admit he’s just a vehicle for their ambitions. I hope he eventually feels strong enough to break free and follow his own path.

  5. Amy Bee says:

    I haven’t watched the docuseries but at least when he does fire his whole team the tennis community wouldn’t be shocked or upset that he did it. I still remember people’s overreaction when Federer left Peter Lungren. It turned out to be a good decision for him.

    • SunnyDays says:

      Exactly. I hope this documentary puts this mistreatment on the record, so to speak. I also hope it generates some noise about how poorly he’s been treated/advised so Carlos becomes more aware of his options, or other coaches/trainers reach out and offer their services to him. He is so, so talented and fun to watch and I hope he has a long career, but that he’s happy and healthy as well.

  6. Mel says:

    I don’t know who he is but all of those middle aged men see him as nothing but a dollar sign. They’re using him to get rich/make names for themselves. They’ll do it even if it permanently injured or kills him

  7. PJ says:

    I agree with this. He’s young and his team aren’t allowing him to enjoy the success he’s already achieved. Instead, they are pushing him to achieve robotic levels of success regardless of his mental or physical condition. And his parents have ceded control to Juan Carlos Ferrero because he is an ex-ATP player and Grand Slam champion so they probably think he “understands” what it takes for Carlos to win and thrive. Just because JFC has been on tour doesn’t mean he’s got all of the pieces in place to help Carlos get to a good place. I hope Carlos exerts some independence regarding his career and life outside of tennis.

  8. Nanea says:

    The people surrounding Carlitos look like male versions of those overbearing stage moms, people who are driven by their own failed aspirations, men who think they’re entitled to getting a piece of the pie that is CA’s prize money.

    Really hoping someone manages to get through to CA, and soon, to convince him for his own good and (mental) health to get rid of those hangers-on.

  9. VilleRose says:

    I don’t pay attention much to tennis and this kid–yes I know he’s 22 and legally an adult but I work mostly with the 18-25 population due to my job and these people are very much kids in their mentality even if they are young adults (some of them barely know what an email attachment is, that is the level I deal with in my job)–is still SO young. He probably feels his current team is his safety net since that’s what got him to his current success so young. His parents don’t seem to be in the picture much when it comes to emotional support or guidance. And any big changes at that age are SO scary. I’m hoping in a few years (or sooner if he listens to other people outside his team) when his brain has matured he’ll realize he can surround himself with knowledgeable yet supportive people who will prioritize his physical, emotional, and mental health.

    • Anne Maria says:

      I was a mother at 22. I’ll leave it to my 47 year old daughter to decide whether I was a kid in my mentality. I think both Carlos and Jannik are terrific although I miss Rafa: and I’m sorry to hear about this treatment of Carlos. Hopefully he will assert himself as he gets a a bit older, and put them in their place as a support team not a control team.

  10. Thinking says:

    I think most tennis players have or have had bad teams around them.

    If someone succeeds in spite of this, it’s sort of fascinating.

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