
World No. 1 Carlos Alcaraz’s 2025 season may have come to an abrupt end due to the hamstring injury he sustained in Turin, but a player of his magnitude rarely disappears from the tennis news cycle.
Fresh off his run to the final at the Nitto ATP Finals, Alcaraz re-emerged in a virtual press conference this week to promote two U.S.-based exhibitions scheduled for next month. During the session, he addressed one of his off-court storylines: the long-anticipated Nike logo that never materialised in Turin.
Earlier this year, multiple Spanish outlets reported that Nike had a custom personal logo ready for Alcaraz, set to be unveiled on the grand stage of the 2025 Nitto ATP Finals. Given the success of past Nike logo launches for icons like Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal, anticipation built rapidly among fans and media alike.
However, when the Finals came and went without a reveal, questions immediately began circulating. Now, Alcaraz has finally addressed the situation and set the record straight.
The six-time Major champion denied that a Turin reveal was ever in the plans.
“It was fake news, to be honest. I’m still working on it, but I didn’t say anything about launching the logo at the ATP Finals. I had a few meetings and we’re going in a good way, in a good path, to launch the logo as soon as possible. Hopefully I’m gonna get it soon.”
His comments confirm that, contrary to early-season reporting, Nike’s new branding project is still in development, and was never close to being completed in time for the ATP Finals.
With Rafael Nadal retired and Roger Federer long switched to Uniqlo, Nike’s tennis identity now rests heavily on Alcaraz and Jannik Sinner. Both have reportedly secured nine-figure deals extending deep into the 2030s, placing them among the company’s most valuable global ambassadors.
Sinner has already debuted a fox-inspired logo rooted in his initials, though he has yet to receive a dedicated gear line. Alcaraz, meanwhile, remains in the design stage of his identity mark — an unusually long wait given his skyrocketing global profile and unprecedented star power for a 22-year-old.
Given the scale of Alcaraz’s appeal and the commercial significance of a signature logo, Nike is clearly being meticulous. And the timing may still work out dramatically in their favour.
With Alcaraz aiming to become the youngest man in tennis history to complete the Career Grand Slam at the 2026 Australian Open in Melbourne, the stage could hardly be bigger. A logo launch there would align marketing and sporting history in a way reminiscent of Nike’s most iconic athlete campaigns.
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