125 Player News WTA
Alizé Cornet confirms second retirement after brief comeback
Alizé Cornet confirms a second, and she hopes permanent, retirement after a brief 2025 comeback. Now.
Alizé Cornet has announced she is stepping away from professional tennis again, describing this return to retirement as final. The 35-year-old Frenchwoman received a farewell at Roland Garros in 2024 but mounted a short comeback this season that ended after a few events.
On Instagram Cornet posted a photograph from San Sebastian and wrote, “Reflecting on my time in San Sebastian and the end (for real this time) of a chapter as a player,” before adding, “Couldn’t dream of a better place than this beautiful city to definitely turn the page and start writing others, in every sense of the word.” The image captured the spot where she played her final tournament earlier this month.
Her comeback record stood at 4-6, with matches at a WTA 125 event and in main-tour qualifying. At Wimbledon she told the WTA’s Alex Macpherson that returning to play qualifying on grass was a way to “close the loop” on a career that began with a memorable Wimbledon debut as a lucky loser in 2007.
Cornet framed her recent return as a conscious effort to finish on her own terms. “It’s the perfect last chapter,” said Cornet, who’s written three books. “This would be the actual perfect ending. Here.” Those remarks underlined a desire to bring closure to a long professional journey.
The decision follows a public farewell at Roland Garros in 2024 and the brief competitive stretch this year. Cornet’s statement and the accompanying photograph in San Sebastian mark the conclusion of the chapter she referenced and her intent to move on from life as a touring player.
© 2025 Robert Prange
125 ATP Play In Challenger Lille
Van Assche Back in Top 100 After Lille Challenger Win; Collignon Retains Pau Title
Van Assche wins Lille to re-enter Top 100; Collignon defends Pau title, earns 125 points this week.
Luca Van Assche captured the Play In Challenger Lille title with a composed 6–2, 6–4 win over Alexander Blockx, producing a quiet but efficient performance that returned him to the world’s top 100. The No. 7 seed saved all three break points he faced and converted each of his three break-point opportunities as he closed out the final in one hour and 19 minutes.
The 21-year-old’s triumph in Lille is his second ATP Challenger victory of the 2026 season, following his earlier title in Quimper. “Less than six months ago I was ranked outside the Top 200 in the world. Today, thanks to this win, I’m back in the Top 100,” Van Assche said moments after match point, holding the trophy in his hands. The 2021 Roland-Garros junior champion earned €30,460 and 125 ATP ranking points and climbs 30 places to world No. 100 in this week’s rankings.
Van Assche’s week featured a dramatic opening match in which he was two points from elimination against Leandro Riedi, trailing 6–3, 5–4, 0–30 before mounting a comeback aided by strong local support. “It was incredible, thank you! On Monday night I was down 6–3, 5–4, 0–30 and you pushed me through. If I’m here today, it’s thanks to you!” he told the crowd during the trophy ceremony. On his way to the title he also defeated Moise Kouame 6–1, 6–1 in the semi-finals. The Parisian teenager, who turns 17 on March 6, earned three straight-set wins in his fourth ATP Challenger Tour main-draw appearance and rose to world No. 397.
One week earlier at the Teréga Open Pau-Pyrénées, Raphael Collignon successfully defended his crown, defeating Benjamin Bonzi 7–6(5), 6–1 in one hour and 22 minutes in front of nearly 3,500 spectators. Collignon did not drop a set across five matches and became the first No. 1 seed in tournament history to lift the trophy, collecting €30,460 and 125 ATP ranking points. The Play In Challenger Lille drew more than 12,000 spectators across the week, matching the event’s attendance record.
125 ATP Play In Challenger Lille
Play In Challenger Lille Preview: Bouquier Defends as a Stronger Challenger 125 Field Arrives
Play In Challenger Lille returns Feb. 16-22 as a Challenger 125; Bouquier defends amid strong field.
The Play In Challenger Lille returns Feb. 16-22 at Tennis Club Lillois Lille Métropole, now established as France’s biggest professional tournament north of Paris. Upgraded in 2025 to an ATP Challenger Tour 125 event with $225,000 in prize money plus hospitality, the eighth edition brings the strongest field in the event’s history with three Top 100 players.
Among the headline names are Filip Misolic, Jacob Fearnley and Hugo Gaston. Misolic, the world No. 81, opens against Martin Landaluce as he seeks his fifth Challenger title, his first of 2026 and his first on hard court after winning just one match so far this season. Fearnley, at world No. 84, leads the bottom half of the draw and will meet Clement Chidekh in round one following a run to the Bahrain Tennis Open quarterfinals and a solid Davis Cup Qualifiers showing for Great Britain. Gaston, world No. 96, makes his debut in Lille and will face Sebastian Ofner.
Defending champion Arthur Bouquier returns with a wild card after his qualifying-to-title victory last year. The former world No. 189 begins against a qualifier and is searching for his first match win of the 2026 season. Nine French players occupy main-draw spots, and the event also highlights promising teenagers and rising pros. Sixteen-year-old Moise Kouame, currently No. 14 in the ITF Junior Rankings, claimed two ITF World Tennis Tour titles this season and will face a qualifier in the first round. Other young contenders include Justin Engel, Joel Schwaerzler and fourth seed Alexander Blockx.
Lloyd Harris arrives in Lille on the back of a 10-match winning streak after consecutive Challenger titles in Soma Bay and Tenerife. After defeating Alejandro Moro Canas 7-5, 7-5 in Sunday’s final, Harris reflected on the victory: “It was a big battle, a very long match in two sets but in the end, I played two fantastic games to break in each set and played all the big points well. That was key today.” On his comeback he added, “It’s a new career for me, it’s a new start,” and “It feels like I am starting a new process from nothing. I prefer not to compare it to the past. It was a younger me and I had to undergo many surgeries. I am just trying to improve day by day now and that’s more important for me.”
125 ATP Open Quimper Bretagne Occidentale
Van Assche Rebuilds Form with Quimper 125 Crown; Jacquet Prevails in Bahrain
Van Assche claimed his fifth Challenger title in Quimper; Jacquet triumphed in Manama’s Bahrain Open
Luca Van Assche used the Open Quimper Bretagne Occidentale to arrest a run of mixed results and collect his fifth ATP Challenger title. The 21-year-old Frenchman rallied from a set down to beat Swiss alternate Remy Bertola 3–6, 6–1, 7–5 in the final of the ATP Challenger Tour 125 indoor event. The match lasted two hours and three minutes; Van Assche struck nine aces, won 80 percent of his first-serve points and broke serve three times to complete the victory.
Ranked No. 165, Van Assche had earlier dismantled defending champion Sascha Gueymard Wayenburg in a near three-hour semifinal. The Quimper success is his first title of the season and the 10th time a Frenchman has won this tournament. He earned €30,460 in prize money and 125 ATP ranking points.
Van Assche’s career arc has been shaped by early junior success and steady transition to the pro game. He reached junior world No. 1 and won the 2021 Roland Garros boys’ singles title, defeating Arthur Fils in the final. He broke into the Top 100 in April 2023 at age 18 and had already secured three Challenger trophies by that time. He has also competed at the 2023 and 2024 Next Gen ATP Finals. His endurance has been a hallmark: he famously saved two championship points to defeat Ugo Humbert in the longest ATP Challenger final at Pau in 2023, a match that lasted three hours and 56 minutes.
Born in Woluwe-Saint-Lambert to a Belgian father and an Italian mother, Van Assche moved to France as a child and began playing tennis at four in Aix-en-Provence. He trained at Pôle France in Poitiers at age 12 and continues his studies in mathematics at Paris Dauphine University. He speaks French, Italian and English and is nicknamed “Lucho.”
During the Quimper trophy presentation he thanked new coach Sébastien Villette, noted his father had travelled from Paris to be present and acknowledged the crowd’s support. “I did a very good junior’s career. It was good for me. I have gained a lot of experience. It helped me a lot for my senior’s career, but I am still young. I learn every day at every tournament,” Van Assche said during a tournament in Valencia two years ago.
At the Bahrain Open in Manama, 24-year-old Kyrian Jacquet captured the title, beating Luca Nardi 7-5, 3-6, 6-4. The world No. 128 converted five of nine break-point opportunities and prevailed in two hours and 13 minutes after victories over Christopher O’Connell, Yannick Hanfmann, Jacob Fearnley and Mattia Bellucci.
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