Thanasi Kokkinakis: The comeback built on pain, patience and belief

For most players, an injury layoff is a pause. For Thanasi Kokkinakis, it became another chapter in a career repeatedly interrupted just as momentum appeared within reach.

Thanasi Kokkinakis: The comeback built on pain, patience and belief

For most players, an injury layoff is a pause. For Thanasi Kokkinakis, it became another chapter in a career repeatedly interrupted just as momentum appeared within reach.

Now back competing at Roland Garros after months away from the tour, the Australian’s latest return may be his most remarkable yet.

Extended absence

Thanasi Kokkinakis arrived in Paris ranked outside the world’s top 850 after an extended absence caused by chronic shoulder and pectoral issues that eventually required an unconventional surgery involving an Achilles tendon graft.

The 30-year-old has long been regarded as one of the sport’s great “what if” stories.

A junior prodigy who once defeated top names including Roger Federer and Stefanos Tsitsipas, Kokkinakis has also endured repeated setbacks involving shoulders, knees, pectoral muscles, and abdominal injuries across more than a decade on tour.

His most recent battle began after pectoral surgery in early 2025 failed to completely resolve persistent pain.

Emotionally draining

Speaking earlier this year, Kokkinakis revealed the extent of the procedure, explaining: “I have an Achilles tendon from a dead person in my arm,” as surgeons attempted to reconnect damaged areas between his shoulder and chest.

The recovery proved emotionally draining.

He returned briefly during the Australian summer but was visibly restricted.

After withdrawing from the Australian Open singles draw in January, Kokkinakis admitted he was “not ready yet” despite desperately wanting to compete at his home Grand Slam.

During a doubles appearance alongside Nick Kyrgios, the injury again flared badly enough to require treatment mid-match.

Afterwards, Kokkinakis conceded: “I don’t want to play another match feeling like that ever again.”

Different tone

But Monday’s press conference at Roland Garros carried a very different tone.

While realistic about the physical uncertainty still surrounding his body, Thanasi Kokkinakis spoke optimistically about finally being back on court after months of rehabilitation.

“I know where my tennis can be,” he said.

“I’m only playing to try and get a year healthy.”

That simple goal – just one uninterrupted season – says everything about the scale of the journey.

Greater challenge

For players at the top of the game, ambitions are usually measured in titles and rankings. For Kokkinakis, merely competing pain-free has often felt like the greater challenge.

His ranking may currently sit far below where his talent suggests it belongs, but there remains widespread respect for the resilience he has shown simply to continue.

Every comeback has required another rebuild, another rehabilitation block, another attempt to trust his body again.

And as he steps back onto the Grand Slam stage in Paris, Kokkinakis is once again choosing belief over frustration – still convinced there is more tennis left in him yet.

UPDATE: Kokkinakis beat France’s Terence Atmane in five sets in his opening round match at Roland Garros. He will take on Spain’s Pablo Carreño Busta in Round 2 on Wednesday, 27 May.

Dave Marshall is reporting exclusively from the 2026 French Open at Roland Garros for The South African.