Novak Djokovic has withdrawn from the 2026 Monte Carlo Masters due to a right shoulder injury, extending a difficult stretch of inactivity for the 24-time Grand Slam champion. Tennis injuries today claimed one of the sport’s biggest names again, with Djokovic sidelined for multiple consecutive clay-court events at a critical point in the European season.
The withdrawal was confirmed Friday, March 27, from Monaco. Djokovic had already missed the Miami Open with the same shoulder complaint. His last competitive match was a three-set defeat to Britain’s Jack Draper in the fourth round of the BNP Paribas Open at Indian Wells — roughly two weeks before the Monte Carlo announcement.
Djokovic’s Shoulder Costs Him Two Straight Masters 1000 Events
Miami and Monte Carlo are both premium events carrying heavy ranking points. Missing back-to-back Masters 1000 tournaments puts real pressure on a player’s seeding ahead of Roland Garros in late May. Djokovic has now gone at minimum three weeks without a competitive match, and no official medical timeline has been released for his recovery.
That absence of a specific diagnosis is, frankly, the most unsettling detail for his clay-court preparation. A short-term strain and a structural shoulder problem demand very different rehab paths. Without public clarity on which one Djokovic is managing, the Madrid and Rome draws in May become genuine question marks rather than scheduled tune-ups.
Djokovic’s Indian Wells defeat to Jack Draper — the British No. 1 — came in three sets. In hindsight, that result may have masked how far the shoulder problem had already developed. Players rarely flag discomfort mid-tournament unless it forces a retirement, and Djokovic completed the match, which suggests the severity became apparent only afterward.
What the Clay Swing Looks Like Without Him
The European clay calendar — Monte Carlo, Madrid, Rome, then Paris — runs roughly eight weeks. Every skipped event tightens Djokovic’s preparation window for a Grand Slam title run. The ATP ranking system awards points based on results from the prior 12 months, so consecutive withdrawals also affect his seeding math for the French Open draw.
Rival contenders Carlos Alcaraz, Jannik Sinner, and Alexander Zverev will accumulate clay-court points while Djokovic sits out. Alcaraz’s own Miami Open exit — a third-round loss to Sebastian Korda — showed the draw is unpredictable this spring. Still, Alcaraz and Sinner both have the match volume to arrive at Roland Garros sharp. Djokovic, at 38, needs competitive reps to find his rhythm on slow clay.
A healthy return at Madrid, roughly five weeks away, would leave two clay-court tournaments before Paris. Most coaches treat that as the floor for adequate Grand Slam prep. Djokovic’s 2023 French Open title — won after injury disruptions earlier that year — shows he can compress preparation and still deliver. But each additional week lost narrows that historical precedent.
Tennis Injuries Today: Gauff, Eala, and the Wider Tour
Novak Djokovic’s Monte Carlo withdrawal is the most prominent health story on tour this week, but tennis injuries today stretched across both the ATP and WTA draws during the American hard-court swing. The Indian Wells and Miami events produced several retirements and late pullouts that reshaped brackets on both sides of the draw.
Coco Gauff retired during her Indian Wells match against Alex Eala, the Filipino-American qualifier, handing Eala a round-of-16 berth. Eala then lost to Linda Noskova in that round. She returned for the Miami Open before falling to Karolína Muchová — a two-tournament run that showed the 19-year-old’s ability to compete at this level while also revealing the physical cost of back-to-back qualifying slogs. Gauff’s retirement raised questions about her physical condition heading into the clay season, though no formal injury update appeared in available reporting.
The pattern of mid-match retirements and late withdrawals across the American swing points to a tour schedule that grinds players hard through an exhausting early-season block. From January’s Australian Open through the back-to-back Masters events in California and Miami, the physical toll compounds fast. Djokovic’s shoulder is the most visible result of that pressure in 2026, but the broader injury picture suggests he is far from alone.
Key Developments in This Week’s Tour Injury News
- Djokovic’s Monte Carlo exit follows his Miami Open pullout — two consecutive Masters 1000 absences for the Serbian veteran, with no confirmed return date.
- Jack Draper defeated Djokovic in three sets at Indian Wells in what proved to be the last match Djokovic played before the shoulder-related withdrawals began.
- Sebastian Korda eliminated Carlos Alcaraz in the Miami Open third round, an early exit that opened the Monte Carlo draw for unseeded contenders.
- Eala’s run at Indian Wells began with Gauff’s retirement and ended with a loss to Noskova; she then competed in Miami before losing to Muchová, logging four matches across the two-tournament stretch.
Madrid Draw Will Signal Whether Djokovic Is Ready
Monte Carlo runs this week in Monaco without Djokovic in the draw. Madrid and Rome follow in May. For tour watchers tracking player availability, the Madrid Open draw — expected in late April — will be the first concrete signal of whether Djokovic can compete on clay before the French Open opens in late May.
Three consecutive seasons of data show Djokovic returning from physical setbacks and performing at the highest level with limited match play. His 2023 Roland Garros title, secured after earlier injury disruptions, is the clearest reference point. Whether the shoulder allows that kind of compressed preparation in 2026 depends on a recovery timeline that has not yet been made public.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why did Novak Djokovic withdraw from the 2026 Monte Carlo Masters?
Djokovic pulled out due to a right shoulder injury confirmed on March 27 in Monaco. The same shoulder problem caused him to miss the Miami Open earlier in the hard-court swing, making Monte Carlo his second straight Masters 1000 absence.
How many Grand Slam titles does Djokovic hold?
Djokovic has won 24 Grand Slam singles titles, the most in men’s tennis history. His most recent major was the 2023 French Open at Roland Garros, which he claimed after managing injury disruptions earlier that season.
What happened when Coco Gauff retired at Indian Wells?
Gauff retired mid-match against Alex Eala, the Filipino-American qualifier, during the Indian Wells draw. Eala advanced to the round of 16 as a result, where she lost to Linda Noskova before competing again at the Miami Open.
Which clay-court tournaments remain before the 2026 French Open?
After Monte Carlo, the European clay swing continues with the Madrid Open in late April and the Rome Masters in May before Roland Garros begins in late May. Djokovic would need to enter at least Madrid to secure meaningful clay preparation before Paris.
How does missing Masters events affect Djokovic’s French Open seeding?
The ATP ranking system calculates points from results over the prior 12 months. Consecutive withdrawals from Monte Carlo and Miami — both 1000-point events — reduce Djokovic’s ranking total and lower his seeding for the Roland Garros draw, potentially placing him in a tougher section of the bracket.

