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GRIGOR DIMITROV (BUL), Silhouette,Schatten,von oben Tennis – Australian Open 2018 – Grand Slam / ATP Tennis Herren / WTA Tennis Damen – Melbourne Park – Melbourne – Victoria – Australia – 19 January 2018. *** GRIGOR DIMITROV BUL silhouette shadow of top tennis Australian Open 2018 Grand Slam ATP WTA Melbourne Park Melbourne Victoria Australia 19 January 2018 Copyright: xJuergenxHasenkopfx

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GRIGOR DIMITROV (BUL), Silhouette,Schatten,von oben Tennis – Australian Open 2018 – Grand Slam / ATP Tennis Herren / WTA Tennis Damen – Melbourne Park – Melbourne – Victoria – Australia – 19 January 2018. *** GRIGOR DIMITROV BUL silhouette shadow of top tennis Australian Open 2018 Grand Slam ATP WTA Melbourne Park Melbourne Victoria Australia 19 January 2018 Copyright: xJuergenxHasenkopfx
WTA icon and 7-time slam queen Venus Williams is set to make her US Open return in singles. After two years, the veteran, now 45, will step back on the hard court of her home slam thanks to a wild card invitation. Sounds great, right? But here’s the paradox on the ATP side. Three-time slam champion and former US Open winner Stan Wawrinka, aged 40, will miss out on the event this season. Now, you may ask: Did he opt out, or was he left behind? To make the growing speculations settle down, the Swiss pro has now come out to spill the truth over his absence from Flushing Meadows.
Wawrinka took to his Instagram story several hours ago and shared Lacoste CEO Thierry Guibert’s story. Apparently, Guibert had posted an image featuring Wawrinka with his 2016 US Open men’s singles trophy. Sharing his sentiments and key details on the Swiss pro’s absence from this year’s US Open edition, he simply wrote, “Not invited… A sham #usopen” while emphasizing that “Stan will be missed.” Guess what?
Wawrinka echoed Guibert’s sentiments, and possibly the reason, as he reposted his story on his own IG profile. He let the original story do the talking without mentioning anything himself. It seems one can very much interpret the actual cause.
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MELBOURNE, AUSTRALIA – FEBRUARY 03: Stan Wawrinka of Switzerland looks on in his singles match against Mikhail Kukushkin of Kazakhstan during day three of the ATP 250 Murray River Open at Melbourne Park on February 03, 2021 in Melbourne, Australia. (Photo by Jonathan DiMaggio/Getty Images)
For the uninitiated, the US Open confirmed this year’s wild card entries earlier this month. The eight names on the list were Brandon Holt, Nishesh Basavareddy, Tristan Boyer, Emilio Nava, Stefan Dostanic, Darwin Blanch, Valentin Royer, and Tristan Schoolkate. To many people’s surprise, Stan Wawrinka, who was given a wild card last year, was nowhere to be seen on the list. The veteran has been receiving wild-card invitations lately to the slams, now that he’s currently outside of the top 100 (No.146). In fact, he was awarded wild card tickets to both the Australian Open and the French Open this year.
So why did the organizers refrain from awarding him the WC this time? While there’s been no official update, fans on social media have got their own, wild explanation.
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Stan Wawrinka’s US Open snub and the Jannik Sinner connection
To understand the context, one needs to go back several months. In early February, following a controversial doping situation, World No.1 Jannik Sinner accepted a three-month suspension owing to a settlement with WADA. The agency previously wanted Sinner’s case to be heard at the Court of Arbitration in Sports (CAS). But the Italian’s acceptance of a 90-day ban eventually closed out the case. WADA’s statement revealed that it “entered into a case resolution agreement in the case of Italian tennis player Jannik Sinner, with the player accepting a three-month period of ineligibility for an anti-doping rule violation that led to him testing positive for clostebol, a prohibited substance, in March 2024.”
Moreover, the agency also made it official that Sinner “did not intend to cheat, and that his exposure to clostebol (banned substance) did not provide any performance-enhancing benefit and took place without his knowledge as the result of negligence of members of his entourage.” Still, he had to accept the suspension because “an athlete bears responsibility for the entourage’s negligence”
What’s your perspective on:
Is the US Open's decision to exclude Wawrinka a disrespect to a former champion?
Have an interesting take?
This received criticism from all corners of the tennis world, with the likes of Nick Kyrgios, Rennae Stubbs, and Tim Henman all chipping in with their two cents. Among those who lashed out at this outcome was also Wawrinka. On X, the former World No.3 wrote, “I don’t believe in a clean sport anymore …”
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Fast forward to August 2025, and many fans on social media recently came up with a theory. They believe the US Open didn’t give Wawrinka a WC due to his strong reaction to Sinner’s case. So far, however, such speculations haven’t been confirmed. What’s your take on the 40-year-old veteran’s snub from the 2025 edition in New York? Let us know in the comments below.
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Is the US Open's decision to exclude Wawrinka a disrespect to a former champion?