Stan Wawrinka is a three-time Grand Slam champion and a former World No. 3. With 16 career titles to his name, and at age 40 one of the oldest players to crack the ATP Top 100 in the modern era, he is all but certain to find his place in the Tennis Hall of Fame. Yet in what has been announced as his final season on tour, Indian Wells tournament director Tommy Haas and the team at the BNP Paribas Open did not see fit to award him a main-draw wild card. That decision means we won’t see “Stanimal” one last time in the California sun — and that doesn’t sit right.
Stan Wawrinka’s Respectable Start to 2026
Wawrinka’s 2026 season has been quietly respectable. The Swiss veteran, who turns 41 at the end of March, reached the third round of the Australian Open before falling to Taylor Fritz. In Rotterdam, he lost to Alex de Minaur, and in Dubai, he was beaten by Daniil Medvedev — both eventual champions of those respective tournaments. There is no shame in that.
After winning just four tour-level matches in 2025, Wawrinka has already collected six victories in 2026 and appears on track to post his strongest season since 2023. For a player in his final campaign, that’s no small feat. Presuming his body holds up, there is every reason to believe he can remain competitive through the spring and summer.
While he has understandably slowed — his last Grand Slam quarterfinal came in 2020 — that signature backhand remains one of the most devastating shots in the sport. He can still dictate rallies, flatten out returns, and take the racquet out of an opponent’s hands when given time. The physical grind of today’s baseline-heavy game may test him more than it once did with a retirement age body, but the shotmaking brilliance is still there.
Wawrinka is now competing purely for the love of the game. His longtime coach, Magnus Norman, told the ATP Tour in January, “He likes the hard work and the tough lifestyle, pushing his body to the physical and mental limits,” adding, “And he likes to perform in front of people. At the Napoli Challenger last year the crowd was really into the matches. For him it doesn’t matter if it’s a Challenger or a Grand Slam.”
Indian Wells is exactly the kind of stage Wawrinka relishes — and it’s unfortunate that fans won’t get one final opportunity to see him embrace that spotlight.
Wawrinka’s History at Indian Wells
Wawrinka owns a 27–13 career record at Indian Wells and has produced several memorable runs in the desert. As recently as 2023, he reached the round of 16 with wins over Miomir Kecmanovic and Holger Rune. In 2024, he exited in three sets against Tomas Machac in a competitive battle.
His best showing came in 2017, when he surged to the final. Along the way, he claimed five victories, including a three-set quarterfinal win over Dominic Thiem, before falling to fellow Swiss legend Roger Federer in the championship match. Federer and Novak Djokovic were frequent obstacles for Wawrinka in Indian Wells; he suffered four defeats to Federer and two to Djokovic at the event. Even so, he was a consistent presence deep into the second week during his prime.
Given that history — and the fact that he has remained competitive well into his late 30s and now 40 — his absence from the main draw this year feels particularly jarring.
Why Wawrinka Deserved a Wild Card
Few players over the past two decades can match Wawrinka’s résumé. Three major titles. Multiple Masters finals. A former World No. 3 ranking in the era of Federer, Nadal, and Djokovic.
Marin Cilic and Gael Monfils — fellow veterans and fan favorites — remain active and competitive. Cilic earned direct entry into the main draw via his ranking, having surpassed 600 career tour-level wins. Monfils received a wild card and draws a qualifier in the opening round. Wawrinka, meanwhile, was left out entirely.
Three of the Indian Wells wild cards went to American players, alongside Monfils and young Spaniard Rafael Jodar. There is nothing inherently wrong with promoting homegrown talent or rising prospects. But several of Jodar’s ATP Next Gen contemporaries had to battle through qualifying. Meanwhile, Wawrinka remains one of the rare players whose name alone can fill a grandstand. Fans still show up to watch that backhand, to relive memories of Melbourne 2014, Paris 2015, and New York 2016, a time when Wawrinka could stand up to giants.
Masters 1000 events are meant to showcase the elite — but they are also celebrations of the sport. There should be room for respect and appreciation for a champion who has given so much to the game for so long. Wawrinka is not seeking a ceremonial farewell. He is still physically and mentally capable of competing with the majority of the Top 100. Wawrinka will also miss Miami and is preparing for the clay court season.
In what is his final season, fans were denied the chance to see one of the game’s great shotmakers perform one last time in the desert. For a player of Stan Wawrinka’s stature, that feels like a missed opportunity — not just for him, but for the tournament and its fans.
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