Born almost by accident in an Acapulco garden, padel has in fifty years become a global phenomenon that both fascinates and worries tennis. Its meteoric rise is already reshaping the landscape of racket sports.
Exhausted but omnipresent stars, ever-longer tournaments and exhibitions that have become a business in their own right: tennis is revealing its deepest contradictions, torn between spectacle and physical survival.
Omnipresent cameras, line judges on the verge of extinction, mistakes that persist nonetheless: technology fascinates as much as it divides. Tennis, at a crossroads, is still searching for its balance between progress and emotion.
While the tennis world wonders about the separation between Carlos Alcaraz and Juan Carlos Ferrero, Feliciano Lopez breaks the silence. Between sadness, doubts, and allusions to economic tensions, the former Spanish player reveals another facet of this story.
On the eve of the 2026 Australian Open, Novak Djokovic is set to write a new page in tennis history. The Serbian, already a ten-time winner in Melbourne, could equal a record held by Roger Federer and Feliciano Lopez: that of the most Grand Slam participations.
In an unfiltered podcast, Jack Sock revisits a little-known episode on the ATP circuit: a heated altercation with Feliciano Lopez after a duel in Houston.
In 2026, the Serb is set to equal a legendary record held by Roger Federer and Feliciano Lopez, proving that he remains an undeniable force on the circuit.