Former tennis star Jo-Wilfried Tsonga has sparked debate by suggesting that winning a Grand Slam is easier today than during the dominance of Roger Federer, Rafael Nadal, and Novak Djokovic. His comments, made ahead of the Australian Open, draw responses from coaches and players who argue the current era presents its own challenges with rising stars like Carlos Alcaraz and Jannik Sinner.
Jo-Wilfried Tsonga, who reached one Grand Slam final in his career, recently questioned the difficulty of winning majors in the modern game. Speaking to Univers Tennis, he praised Alcaraz as a complete player but wondered if he is stronger than the Big Three in physical or mental aspects. Tsonga expressed a desire to see Alcaraz navigate a hypothetical draw beating Juan Martin del Potro, Stan Wawrinka, Djokovic, Nadal, and Federer. He noted that Alcaraz and Sinner 'are the only two in the field' dominating currently.
The Big Three won 66 of 81 majors from Federer's first Wimbledon triumph in 2003 to Djokovic's 2023 US Open victory. Only Andy Murray and Wawrinka claimed three each, with nine other men sharing the rest over two decades.
Patrick Mouratoglou, Serena Williams' former coach, countered on social media, insisting no credit should be taken from Alcaraz and Sinner, whose level is 'unbelievable.' He suggested Tsonga might struggle against today's mid-tier players like Jack Draper, Holger Rune, Alex de Minaur, Taylor Fritz, Ben Shelton, and Felix Auger-Aliassime.
Alexander Zverev, now ranked No. 3, described the game as faster and more physical now. He recalled how slams felt predetermined in the Big Three era—Djokovic at the Australian Open, Nadal at Roland Garros, Federer and Djokovic at Wimbledon—leaving the US Open as the main battleground. Zverev hopes the current duopoly of Alcaraz and Sinner might shift this year.
Daniil Medvedev, a 2021 US Open winner, acknowledged the pair's superiority but emphasized that upsets are possible. 'You can beat anyone on a given day,' he said, citing his Grand Slam victories over both.
Stan Wawrinka avoided comparisons, stating, 'I don’t compare generations, I enjoy them.' The debate highlights evolving tennis dynamics, with homogenized surfaces making outcomes less predictable, yet the top seeds remain formidable barriers in later rounds.