Tennis is a game for life. They say. But in big sports, where every millisecond counts, where the serve speed is 200 kilometers, where after a three-set match your legs are buzzing and the next day, can you stay competitive after forty? It turns out, yes. Not just stay competitive, but win, take titles, break records. Big tennis after 40 is not a miracle. It's science, the harshest discipline, and a new philosophy. Meet the heroes who have rewritten the rules.
Let's start with the obvious. Roger Federer ended his career at 41, but at 40 he was playing in Grand Slam semi-finals and filling stadiums. Serena Williams fought for titles at 40. Legendary Ken Rosewall even won tournaments at 44. But there are also more recent examples. Feliciano Lopez, the Spanish left-hander with an ideal court, played in the tour until he was 42, coming out to the court with 20-year-olds. And the Swiss Stan Wawrinka continued to dominate the young players in 2025, at 40 and a bit, winning challengers and occasionally stunning seeded players at majors.
In the women's tour, Venus Williams played at Wimbledon at 43. Her record is a win over a top player at 42. Japanese Ai Sugiyama played until 42, and Italian Flavia Pennetta ended at 39, but could have played longer. The list is long. And what unites them is one thing: they didn't just reach a solid age, they were competitive.
The short answer is no. At 40, the maximum heart rate decreases, recovery after sharp accelerations slows down, the elasticity of ligaments decreases, and muscle mass decreases. These are facts. But the long answer is that all this is compensated for by experience, technique, and the ability to distribute strength. A forty-year-old tennis player won't run from corner to corner like a maniac. He will hit more accurately, choose positions more wisely, use sliced and shortened shots more often, save his breath.
Research by sports physiologists shows that the peak aerobic power of a trained amateur at 40 drops by 15-20 percent compared to 25 years ago. But for a professional who trains 6 days a week with childlike diligence, the drop may be only 5-10 percent. And the technique developed over 20 years compensates for the decrease in speed with perfect shot choice.
The main problem is not running, but recovery. At 25 after a five-set match you are ready to play the next day. At 40 you need two days of rest and an ice bath, massage, physiotherapy, thorough stretching. That's why veterans build their calendar differently: they skip minor tournaments, save themselves for the slams. And this calculation is justified.
At 20 you are afraid of losing. At 40, you don't care much about the ranking anymore. This is a terrifying weapon. An experienced player doesn't get nervous on break points. He has seen thousands of them. He knows that after fatigue comes second wind if you don't panic. He can read his opponent's serve by the position of the elbow, disrupt the rhythm, provoke mistakes.
Take Roger Federer in his last years. He lost in speed, but won in intelligence. He didn't get involved in races, he cut with an awkward hand, came to the net, finished the rally with one shot. Young players said, "He's impossible to play with. He knows what I will do before I do."
Add motivation to this. When you're 40, every match can be your last. You cherish every moment on the court. You don't slack off, don't give up at 0:5. You fight because it's your last autumn. And this old man's fury often breaks the youthful carelessness.
What do veterans do to not fall apart? First, they change the training volume. Not 5 hours on the court, but 2-3, but with maximum concentration. Second, work on flexibility and the prevention of injuries. Yoga, Pilates, swimming. Third, strength training without impact loads. No weight jumps, no barbell on the shoulders. Only isolated exercises for balance and stabilization. Fourth, 9 hours of sleep and a strict diet. No alcohol, minimum sugar, control of the glycemic index.
Serena Williams said that after 35 she stopped eating red meat, switched to fish and plant-based protein. Federer hired a personal chef for tours. Novak Djokovic (who is also over 40) preaches a gluten-free diet and meditation. This is not a whim. It's a necessity.
The most important element is warming up and cooling down. The veterans warm up for an hour, at least. After the match — an hour of cooling down, ice, compression sleeves. And so every day. If a young player can come out and serve right away, then an old man without warming up will tear a muscle in the first game.
The standard set of injuries for tennis players after 40 is: meniscus injuries, problems with the Achilles, tennis elbow (yes, it's not only among amateurs, just chronic among professionals), disc hernias. But modern sports medicine performs miracles. Platelet-rich plasma therapy. Hyaluronic acid injections into joints. Treatment with stem cells. All this is expensive, but accessible to top players.
There is a case where Wawrinka had knee surgery at 38 and returned in three months, not half a year as doctors predicted. The secret? A special rehabilitation protocol with cryotherapy and a hyperbaric chamber. Or take Murray: he got a metal implant in his hip joint at 32 and played until 37. After 40, prosthetics are common. But playing tennis on a prosthesis? Yes, you can, if the prosthesis is designed for impact loads. Expensive, but possible.
The modern racket for a veteran is not the same as it was at 25. Less weight, a larger head, a softer string, reduced stiffness. All this reduces vibration and load on the elbow and wrist. Shoes — with additional shock absorption in the heel, often with custom insoles. Compression knee sleeves and elbow sleeves are not a luxury, but a must.
Moreover, many veterans use cryogenic chambers after matches and special massage guns to get rid of lactic acid. Gadgets for monitoring heart rate, stress level, sleep quality. All this gives additional percentages that add up to a win.
Let's not forget: big tennis is not just ATP and WTA. It's thousands of amateur tournaments, club championships, corporate leagues. There people in their 50s, 60s, 70s play at a high level. The famous "senior tennis" is a separate universe. The World Championships among veterans (ITF Senior Tour) gather participants up to 85 years old. In the 45+ category, former professionals play who are not worse than the current top 500. In the 55+ category, people whose serve is still 150 km/h.
One of the inspiring examples is the American Gayle Case, who at 65 won the world championship in his category and had an active ITF ranking. He started playing tennis at 30. That is, not since childhood. And this proves that age is not a sentence if you have a head on your shoulders and the right approach to your body.
The first and most important advice is to undergo a full medical examination before starting regular games. Heart, joints, bone density. Second, don't play through pain. Pain in tennis after 40 is not normal. It's a signal to stop and figure it out. Third, use the right technique. Don't hit every ball with all your strength, but involve your legs and torso. Fourth, play on slow surfaces (clay, artificial grass), avoid hard courts that kill your knees. Fifth, alternate tennis with swimming and cycling to unload the joints. Sixth, don't set the goal of beating 20-year-olds. Enjoy the game, not the result.
And one more thing: don't be afraid to play doubles. Doubles tennis after 40 is an ideal load. Less running, more intelligence, more enjoyment — a whole trainload. Many veterans switch to doubles and find a second youth there.
Every year athletes play longer. Medicine is improving, recovery methods are also improving. Perhaps in ten years we will see the first player who wins a Grand Slam match at 45. In amateur tennis, age categories will expand to 90+. Tennis is a unique sport where skill and experience can outweigh fading physicality. Here you don't have to run a marathon, you just have to hit the ball with a racket. And you can learn this skill at any age and maintain it until old age.
So if you're over 40 and you think it's time to hang up the racket, no, it's not time. It's time to change your approach. Less running, more accuracy. Less stubbornness, more intelligence. And then tennis after 40 will not be survival, but enjoyment. And maybe, titles. Who knows?
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