alcaraz

The Tennis Player's Nasal Breathing Protocol: Why Alcaraz Wears One

The Tennis Player's Nasal Breathing Protocol: Why Alcaraz Wears One - Strapflow

Read time: 8 minutes. The breathing protocol Carlos Alcaraz visibly trains with — and why between-point recovery is the most under-trained skill in tennis.

Lungs under match-load

Why Alcaraz wears one

Watch any Alcaraz match in 2024–2025 and you'll see the black strip across his nose. He's not battling a cold. He's running the same protocol every elite endurance athlete uses: nasal-only breathing under load, maximum nasal airway during high-intensity rallies, and accelerated between-point HR recovery via the parasympathetic shift that slow nasal exhales trigger.

Tennis is the ideal sport for this protocol. The 20–25 second windows between points are exactly where nasal-only slow breathing produces the largest HR drop. Train this and you'll recover faster than your opponent through 5 sets.

The science

  • 6× more nitric oxide from nasal breathing (Lundberg 1996)
  • HR recovery accelerated 30–60 bpm faster in the first minute when running the vagus reset protocol
  • HRV climbs 10–30% within 4 weeks
  • BOLT score improvements of 5–15 seconds in 8 weeks — direct correlate of "between-rally fatigue resistance"

What tennis players report after 6 weeks

  • Fresher legs in set 3 across the board
  • Lower HR during long rallies — the rally itself feels less expensive
  • Faster mental composure between points — the parasympathetic shift IS the composure
  • Better serve consistency late in matches when most opponents are gassed

Vagus nerve and between-point recovery

The protocol

Before the match / practice

Apply a Strapflow strip when you put on your wristbands. Holds 12 hours, survives full-court sweat, doesn't catch on headbands or visors.

During rallies

Mouth breathing during long rallies is normal and expected. The strip stays on — the airflow assist reduces breathing work even during hybrid breathing.

Between points (the actual protocol)

  1. Close your mouth the moment the point ends.
  2. Inhale 3 seconds through the nose. Exhale 6 seconds through the nose. Adapted from Nestor's 4-8 protocol for tennis's shorter recovery windows.
  3. Walk to the baseline. Bounce the ball. Stay nasal.
  4. HR will drop 30+ bpm if you've trained the protocol.

Between games / changeovers

Sit. Mouth closed. 4-8 protocol. 90 seconds is enough for full parasympathetic shift.

Sleep

Apply a Strapflow strip every night. Recovery between training days = match readiness.

Common mistakes

  1. Mouth breathing between points (you're throwing away the recovery window)
  2. Skipping the strip during practice (the adaptation has to compound)
  3. Quitting before week 3 (adaptation curve is consistent)

Start with Black — Strapflow 30-Pack, $17.90 →

Sources

  • Patrick McKeown — The Oxygen Advantage
  • James Nestor — Breath
  • Lundberg JO et al. — Nasal nitric oxide, 1996

Reading next

BJJ, MMA, and the Nasal Breathing Protocol: How to Stop Gassing Out - Strapflow
Stop Snoring. Wake Up Restored. The Nasal Breathing Protocol For Sleep. - Strapflow

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