The relentless opening stretch of the 2026 season has finally caught up with Carlos Alcaraz's right wrist. Less than seventy-two hours after the Monte-Carlo final defeat that cost him the world No. 1 ranking, the Spaniard announced on Wednesday evening his withdrawal from the Barcelona Open Banc Sabadell. The pain that had been lurking since Miami crossed a red line this time.
Alcaraz had started his Catalan campaign well. On Tuesday, he dispatched qualifier Otto Virtanen 6-4, 6-2 in a clean straight-sets performance, with no visible sign of physical discomfort. Early post-match comments from his camp even suggested that the tightness carried over from Monte-Carlo might fade with a day's rest. The scans in Barcelona returned a harsher verdict.
"I thought a few hours of rest would make the pain go away," Alcaraz said in a statement released by his team. "It is a more serious injury than we expected. I have to listen to my body and stop now to come back strong." The diagnosis points to a right wrist strain combined with forearm overload, warning signs that had been building since Indian Wells given the sheer volume of matches already played.
The calendar shows no mercy to Carlos Alcaraz. The Mutua Madrid Open begins in ten days. With 500 points forfeited by skipping Barcelona, and a heavy defence looming in Madrid and Rome, the Spaniard cannot afford another absence. His team has explicitly targeted a Madrid return, followed by Rome, before the headline appointment at Roland-Garros where he defends a 2,000-point title.
On the ranking front, the news settles the picture: will keep the world No. 1 spot without lifting a racket, as the Italian is not competing this week. The analysis ScoreShark published on Tuesday indicated that Alcaraz needed the Barcelona title to overtake Sinner; that scenario is now off the table. Sinner will begin his 68th week at the top on Monday, with the gap to his closest chaser about to widen.
The Barcelona Open loses its biggest commercial draw at the halfway point. Lorenzo Musetti becomes the highest-ranked name left in the bracket, alongside , Tomas Machac and outsider Hamad Medjedovic, who stunned Alex de Minaur overnight. Provided their own bodies hold up, the trophy will be fought out between these few contenders.
For Alcaraz, the equation is now as mental as it is physical. Taking two heavy blows within a week — a final lost to Sinner, a withdrawal through injury — is not trivial. Defending Roland-Garros 2025 begins long before the first ball is struck in Paris.



