ANALYTICAL BREAK: EMMA RADUCANU'S OFF-COURT STRATEGY WITH NEW COACH
Emma Raducanu opens up on her tough 2025 season, revealing how she overcame stalker-related fears and finds mental peace by promoting her quiet off-season in Bromley.
Emma Raducanu has landed many endorsement deals early in her career. Yet, becoming an ambassador for the London borough of Bromley might be her dream sponsorship.
During a chat with tennis reporters after a tough but rewarding season, Raducanu was just trying to describe her quiet off-season at home when she started promoting Bromley. “I feel so settled here,” she said. “I haven’t been in the UK much this year because of competitions, but spending time with my parents has been great. I’ve loved being in Bromley. It reminds me of being a kid—same bedroom, everything.”
“Bromley now has these great coffee shops that didn’t used to be here. I’ve been trying them all. It’s been fun, with so much green space, and I’ve been taking the train. I’ve been in rush hour every day, which is something. But it’s my way to switch off. As soon as I’m on the train to Waterloo, I feel like my day is done.”
The peace Raducanu talks about comes after a good, if not amazing, season where she moved forward. She climbed from outside the top 60 to number 29 in 2025, her best ranking since 2022. This year, she played more often with fairly steady results.
She’s also worked to stabilise her team, which has been a problem. She seems to be doing well with her coach, Francisco Roig, who used to coach Rafael Nadal. She’ll start the 2026 season with a new physiotherapist and strength coach, Emma Stewart, who has experience in tennis and recently worked with the British Rowing team.
Lately, though, she’s been trying not to think about tennis. After ending her season early in Asia due to illness, she spent time improving her Chinese while visiting family in her mother’s home country and her Spanish at Roig’s suggestion, along with French. “I was trying to do everything,” she said, smiling. “I need rest days from my rest days. It takes a lot.”
As the 2021 US Open champ talked about learning languages, someone from her team joked that she now sends him texts in French, even though he doesn’t speak it. “It’s funny because I start mixing languages,” Raducanu said. “I’ll say a sentence in three different languages and not even know what I’m saying. But it’s been great for me to focus on something else and use my brain. It’s the best thing for me, and I feel pretty good, just trying to improve off the court.”
Besides good results, 2025 had tough times. In February, Raducanu had issues with someone who was fixated on her, which made headlines. These events affected her confidence. She once said her neck hurt from looking down in public to avoid being recognised. “Now it doesn’t. My neck doesn’t hurt as much. I’m not looking down as much. My posture is better,” she said, laughing. “But I think, ‘Are they going to see me on the train?’ It’s not so bad.”
Raducanu’s comfort in the city during the off-season shows she’s moved past the incident. “I’ve gotten over it,” she said. “What bothered me was seeing a photo of myself in London, and I didn’t see the paparazzi. I was with my two best friends. This happened last week, and some tabloid said I had a new boyfriend. But he’s my best friend’s brother. I thought, ‘Come on, guys. Get it right.’ I was with my best friend’s brother, and we were going to the rugby. They cropped my best friend out, so it was just me and me, and I didn’t see the paparazzi. That’s creepy. How did they take that photo? Other than that, I feel good knowing someone’s always watching out for me.”
Off the court, 2025 was a tough year in tennis. The latest discussions are about the long season, with players saying it’s too hard. But Raducanu has other ideas compared to players like Iga Swiatek, Carlos Alcaraz, Jannik Sinner, and fellow British number one, Jack Draper.
“I think it’s a challenge,” she said. “I don’t think we should complain because that’s what we have. We earn a good living, too. It’s not always great. It’s hard sometimes, and we’re tired mentally and physically, and everything hurts. But what can we do? Some people have bosses who make them do things, but they have to do their job. If we don’t complain, it sets a better example for younger people who want to play tennis. If they see top players complaining about the schedule, it’s not inspiring.”
Next time Raducanu plays, she’ll join her friend Draper in the United Cup, a mixed-gender team event in Australia that starts the season. Before that, she’ll start training hard this week with Roig in Barcelona to build on what she did in 2025, improve her shots, and get closer to the top players.
“I had some tough times on and off the court early in the year,” she said. “But it taught me how strong I am and what I need to do to avoid going back there. I need to spend time learning and taking care of my mind. Learning about myself has been great, so I feel good.”
BREAKING: AUSTRALIAN OPEN SEEDING AT RISK! CHECK THE NEW 18-TOURNAMENT RANKING RULE NOW
The 2026 ATP season begins with a major rule change. Rankings now count only 18 tournaments, causing points to drop for the Top 10.
The 2026 ATP Tour season kicks off with the United Cup this Friday. Everyone's watching to see what happens in men's tennis this year.
There's a ranking rule change that started late in 2025 that everyone will be dealing with.
Here’s a breakdown of the change and who it's impacting:
What's the New Rule?
Before 2026, a player's ATP ranking could include points from 19 tournaments: the four Grand Slams, the eight mandatory Masters 1000 events, and their next seven best results.
These could be from the Monte Carlo Masters, ATP 500, ATP 250, or Challenger events. Qualifying for the ATP Finals was a bonus.
Now, only 18 events count. Rankings will only include the four Grand Slams, eight mandatory Masters events, and a player's six best results, plus the ATP Finals if they qualify.
Also, the top 30 players only need to play four ATP 500 events, instead of five.
Who's Affected in the Top 10?
This change took place recently, and seven players in the top 10 lost points. Their positions stayed the same this time, except for the players who are stated.
Carlos Alcaraz, Jannik Sinner, and Jack Draper were not affected.
Alexander Zverev lost 50 points, Novak Djokovic dropped 10, Felix Auger-Aliassime lost 55, Taylor Fritz dropped 50, Alex de Minaur lost 55, Lorenzo Musetti dropped 50, and Ben Shelton lost 10 points.
What About the Rest of the Rankings?
The top players are mostly okay, but the further down the rankings you go, the more change you'll see.
In the top 20, Jiri Lehecka is the only one impacted. He lost 10 points and fell to No. 18. Karen Khachanov moved up to 17th.
Luciano Darderi and Tallon Griekspoor switched places and are now ranked 25th and 26th. These were the only changes in the top 30.
Outside the top 30, there were bigger moves.
Jaume Munar jumped three spots to No. 33, and Corentin Moutet moved up to 34th. Brandon Nakashima and Stefanos Tsitsipas each fell two spots.
Now ranked 35th and 36th, Nakashima and Tsitsipas might have a harder time getting seeded for the Australian Open.
Pablo Carreno Busta dropped the most, falling from 89th to 93rd.
IMMEDIATE: SHOCKING DETAILS BEHIND CARLOS ALCARAZ-FERRERO SPLIT; WILL HE JOIN RIVAL JANNIK SINNER
World No. 1 Carlos Alcaraz has shocked tennis by splitting with Juan Carlos Ferrero. Learn the real reason behind the breakup.
Tennis fans were shocked when Carlos Alcaraz and his long-time coach, Juan Carlos Ferrero, split. Ferrero has now said whether they've talked since.
Even though Alcaraz is only 22, his time with Ferrero is one of tennis' best. The 2003 French Open champ started coaching Alcaraz, who was a young, promising player in 2019.
With Ferrero's help, Alcaraz became a superstar and one of the most exciting players to watch. He's won six Grand Slams and finished 2025 as the world's top player, ahead of Jannik Sinner.
The only major title they didn't win together was the Australian Open. Even though it's still a few weeks away, people recently saw Alcaraz's outfit for the 2026 tournament in Melbourne. It's bright and colourful.
Alcaraz had a great 2025, winning two more Grand Slams, so the split was even more surprising. It sounds like disagreements between Ferrero and others close to Alcaraz caused the change.
In an interview, Ferrero answered a question everyone's been asking: Have he and Alcaraz been in touch since they stopped working together?
We haven't talked yet because he needs to relax so he can train. Once things calm down, we'll talk, and everything will be fine.
Ferrero's nice words about Alcaraz suggest they'll talk again. He thinks they can still be friends after all they've achieved.
I've learned a lot from Carlos. He's a kid with amazing charisma. He's always loyal and honest, tells the truth, and works really hard. I'm happy because once things settle, I'm sure we'll keep talking, remembering all the things we did together, and stay friends.
It must be tough for Ferrero not to be coaching Alcaraz after working so hard to make him one of the best. Taking some time before talking to the 22-year-old might also be good for him.
Juan Carlos Ferrero was also asked about coaching Jannik Sinner after splitting from Carlos Alcaraz.
Since 2024, one of Ferrero's main jobs has been helping Alcaraz figure out how to beat Jannik Sinner. Together, they've won every men's singles Grand Slam in the last two seasons.
Now that Ferrero isn't Alcaraz's coach, he was asked if he'd consider joining Sinner's team, which would be a huge change in tennis.
Ferrero didn't say no. Instead, he said he needed time to get used to not coaching Alcaraz. Sinner is still coached by Simone Vagnozzi and Darren Cahill, after Cahill changed his mind about retiring at the end of 2025.