Top tennis players Carlos Alcaraz, Jannik Sinner, and Aryna Sabalenka frustratedly removing fitness trackers on Australian Open court amid ban enforcement.
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Top players banned from fitness trackers at Australian Open

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Several top tennis players, including Carlos Alcaraz, Jannik Sinner and Aryna Sabalenka, were asked to remove wearable fitness trackers during the Australian Open 2026. The devices, approved by the ITF and tours, are not permitted at Grand Slams. Players expressed frustration, hoping for a policy change to monitor health and performance.

At the Australian Open in Melbourne, organizers enforced a ban on wearable fitness trackers, affecting prominent players like world No. 1 Carlos Alcaraz, defending champion Jannik Sinner, and top-ranked Aryna Sabalenka. The devices, such as the Whoop tracker, monitor metrics including heart rate variability, sleep stages, skin temperature, and recovery data, which athletes use to optimize performance and prevent injuries.

Alcaraz was instructed by umpire Marija Cicak to remove his device from under his sweatband before his fourth-round match against Tommy Paul on Sunday. Sinner faced a similar request ahead of his fourth-round victory over Luciano Darderi on Monday, after struggling with extreme heat in an earlier round. Sabalenka, aiming for a third title, was told to take off her tracker following her quarterfinal win on Tuesday.

The trackers are approved by the International Tennis Federation (ITF), the ATP since 2024, and the WTA since 2021, allowing their use in regular tour events. However, the four Grand Slams—Australian Open, French Open, Wimbledon, and US Open—have not cleared them, creating a discrepancy. Tennis Australia stated: "Wearables are currently not permitted at Grand Slams. The Australian Open is involved in ongoing discussions on how this situation could change."

Players voiced confusion and disappointment. Sabalenka explained: "The reason why I was wearing that on court, because we received the email that we got approval from the ITF to wear this device. The whole year we are wearing [it] on WTA tournaments... It's just for tracking my health." She added: "I don't understand why Grand Slams have not allowed us to wear it. I really hope that they will reconsider the decision."

Sinner noted the data's post-match value: "There is certain data what we would like to track a little bit on court... It's more about [what] you can see after the match. These are data we would like to use also in practice sessions, because from that you can practice on with the heart rate, how much calories you burn."

Darderi complied readily: "The umpire asked me straight away if this is the tracker... 'Remove'. It's fine... But rules are rules. I understand. I won't use it again."

Whoop CEO Will Ahmed called the ban "crazy," vowing to fight for athletes' access to health data. Former player John Millman described it as "ridiculous," criticizing the ITF for lagging behind. Meanwhile, the tournament provides alternative data via high-tech cameras, tracking distance covered and sprints. The controversy highlights tensions between tour approvals and Grand Slam autonomy.

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Top players including Alcaraz, Sinner, and Sabalenka expressed frustration with the Australian Open's ban on ITF-approved fitness trackers like Whoop, citing health monitoring needs. The Whoop CEO highlighted Sabalenka's confusion. Discussions question if Grand Slams lag behind tours on tech adoption or prioritize fairness. Some users view the rule as outdated or 'crazy,' while others speculate players are deliberately challenging it. A few protested by purchasing devices.

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Jannik Sinner celebrates quarterfinal advancement after defeating Luciano Darderi in straight sets at the Australian Open.
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Sinner defeats Darderi to reach Australian Open quarterfinals

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Jannik Sinner advanced to the quarterfinals of the Australian Open 2026 with a straight-sets victory over compatriot Luciano Darderi, 6-1, 6-3, 7-6(2). The match was marked by Darderi's frustration leading to a code violation and Sinner's removal of a banned fitness tracker before play. Sinner now awaits the winner of Ben Shelton versus Casper Ruud.

Top tennis players Carlos Alcaraz, Jannik Sinner and Aryna Sabalenka were instructed to remove their Whoop fitness trackers during the 2026 Australian Open. The devices, approved for ATP and WTA tours, remain banned at Grand Slams amid ongoing debates over player welfare and data rules. Tournament organizers are in discussions to potentially allow them in the future.

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The CEO of fitness tracker company Whoop has publicly condemned the Australian Open for forcing tennis players to remove its wearable devices. Describing the decision as 'ridiculous,' the executive argued that 'data is not steroids.' This controversy highlights tensions between sports regulations and wearable technology.

A CNET review highlights the Oura Ring as the best smart ring for monitoring fitness, sleep, and stress in 2026, outperforming competitors after months of testing. The Ultrahuman Ring Air, previously favored for workouts, faces a US ban due to an Oura lawsuit. The Evie Ring targets menstrual health but falls short on actionable insights.

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Researchers at the University of Technology Sydney are exploring how sweat-sensing wearables, combined with artificial intelligence, could enable real-time, non-invasive tracking of health biomarkers. Their work suggests that sweat-based monitoring might one day help flag risks for conditions such as diabetes and other chronic diseases before symptoms appear, offering a painless complement to some blood tests for tracking hormones, medications, and stress-related biomarkers.

World No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka has pulled out of the 2026 Qatar TotalEnergies Open due to a schedule change, leaving Iga Swiatek as the top seed for the first WTA 1000 event of the season. The tournament in Doha begins on February 8 with a strong field including Elena Rybakina, Coco Gauff and defending champion Amanda Anisimova. Other notable withdrawals include Jessica Pegula and several players recovering from injuries.

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Jannik Sinner overcame severe cramps in extreme heat to defeat Eliot Spizzirri 4-6, 6-3, 6-4, 6-4 and advance to the fourth round of the Australian Open. The two-time defending champion benefited from a timely suspension under the tournament's heat policy, which allowed the roof on Rod Laver Arena to close and gave him crucial recovery time. Sinner now faces compatriot Luciano Darderi in the next round.

 

 

 

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