Very few great players have followed that ancient piece of advice to, “Quit while you’re on top.” But they appear to be all-in on a counter-intuitive adage: “Fire your coach while you’re on top.”
The latest pro to embrace the new dictum is Carlos Alcaraz, who announced on social media on Wednesday that he has split with his coach of seven years, Juan Carlos Ferrero. Alcaraz, or whomever is crafting his social media, wrote: “We have reached the top, and I think that if our sporting paths have to separate it should be from there, from the place we always worked for and aspired to reach.”
Read more: Carlos Alcaraz announces shock split from longtime coach Juan Carlos Ferrero
That was a dignified way to put it, but it still left pundits shocked and fans weeping and gnashing their teeth. Among other things, Ferrero had just days earlier been named the ATP’s 2025 Coach of the Year. There is something weird about this development. It’s like a race-car driver firing his crew chief after winning the biggest race of the year, or a person dumping a spouse upon returning from an idyllic vacation mostly spent laying around mooning over each other.
