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ATP ATP Finals Grand Slam

Sinner and Alcaraz: A Season of Shared Supremacy in 2025

Their rivalry defined 2025 – alternating Grand Slam wins, ATP Finals and the year-end No. 1. Always.

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This season in men’s tennis was defined by the rivalry between Jannik Sinner and Carlos Alcaraz, a campaign of alternating big wins and narrow margins. The two embraced after another high-stakes match — Sinner with an arm around Alcaraz’s neck and Alcaraz returning the gesture on Sinner’s shoulder — an image that captured how close their levels have been.

Alcaraz prevailed in a fifth-set tiebreaker in the French Open final; Sinner answered by winning Wimbledon; Alcaraz then took the US Open; and Sinner defended his ATP Finals title in Turin on Sunday. Alcaraz sealed the year-ending No. 1 ranking, while No. 2 Sinner finished the season with the confidence of a victory over his chief rival.

“The facts are they’re a level above everyone,” said Felix Auger-Aliassime, who lost to both Sinner (in the group stage) and Alcaraz (in the semifinals) at the season-ending event. “The ranking doesn’t lie. They’re the two best players. That’s the facts. Different game styles, but both put extreme pressure on their opponent in different ways,” added Auger-Aliassime, who ends the year at a career-high No. 5. “They keep showing up and playing good, so credit to them.”

“These two guys are really incredible for our sport, both on and off the court,” added ATP chairman Andrea Gaudenzi.

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Sinner also won the Australian Open and reached the final of all four Grand Slams despite missing three months near the start of the year after settling a doping case. The season-ending match in Turin drew a record 7 million viewers on Italian television, the most-watched tennis match in the country’s history. Like in 2024, Sinner did not drop a set at the Finals, becoming the first player in the event’s history to do that in two different years.

“I feel to be a better player than last year,” Sinner said. “All the losses I had, I tried to see the positive thing and trying to evolve me as a player. I felt like this happened in a very good way.”

Alcaraz, who acknowledged indoor play was a learning curve last year, said, “I didn’t doubt about playing and fighting toe-to-toe with Jannik on indoor court,” and “I’m pretty sure that it’s going to keep growing up, my level on indoor court.” Sinner improved his serve in Turin, dropping it only once and firing a 187 kph second serve that helped save a set point. “He’s actually pumped up the miles per hour and he is getting the ball closer to the line, which means he gets a lot more free points,” coach Darren Cahill said.

“I had already served two or three second serves in the same way (in that game) and I kept on losing the point. So I had to come up with something different. I decided for the riskiest option,” Sinner said. “Sometimes you need a bit of courage and some luck. I would rather lose that point then have him win it.” Alcaraz added, “That surprised me.”

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Auger-Aliassime noted his own rise: “I’ve always believed, since I’m a kid believed, and my ambition was to win Grand Slams and be No. 1 in the world,” and said improvement remains his focus. Cahill outlined a long view for Sinner: “We want (Sinner) to be playing his best tennis when he’s 28, 29, 30 years of age,” Cahill said. “Hopefully we’re setting the plan and platform for him to be able to do that in a few years.”

While Alcaraz headed to Bologna for the Davis Cup finals this week, Sinner began his offseason and was already turning his attention to 2026. He will enter the Australian Open as the two-time defending champion and will attempt to win the French Open for the first time.

ATP BNP Paribas Open Masters

From Fans to Contenders: Iva Jovic and Learner Tien’s Indian Wells Homecoming

Iva Jovic and Learner Tien grew up visiting Indian Wells and return this year as rising tour stars .

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As children both Iva Jovic and Learner Tien visited Indian Wells with their families, the Tiens driving from Irvine and the Jovics from Torrance. Each arrived as a fan: Jovic waited in the sun for two and a half hours to try to get Novak Djokovic’s autograph; Tien’s earliest priority was the tournament’s frozen lemonades. “Those things are one of the greatest things ever,” he said, and he also remembers snagging a signature as Djokovic walked out of Centre Court. “I was one of the people hanging over the wall.”

Their journeys to the professional ranks have been rapid. Jovic only committed to tennis full time after the pandemic closed other sports in 2020. A year later she won the Orange Bowl and, four years after that, reached the Top 50. After an extensive pre-season working with coach Tom Gutteridge, she described the process plainly: “I took a pretty long pre-season, so I had a lot of time to get everything done.” She added, “There was a couple of specific things I was working on. There was a lot of physical stuff in the gym, a couple of technical tweaks with my ground strokes, with my serve, which took time as well.” The work showed in 2026: a final in Hobart, a first major quarterfinal in Melbourne and a 13-4 start to the season that left her ranked No. 18.

Tien’s progression has been similarly steady. After joining the tour in 2025 he displayed consistency and smart point construction, rising into the Top 30 as a rookie. By February 2026 he was at a career-high No. 23. He enlisted Michael Chang for coaching last summer to refine his serve, toss and tactics and has seen results, including a quarterfinal in Australia and a semifinal in Delray Beach. On Chang he said, “In general I think he’s very encouraging. He’s never getting down whether I’m playing well or whether I’m playing poorly. He’s always just consistently just giving me good energy, a lot of support.” He later joked, “There’s not that much video from way back then.”

Both players are second-generation Californians with immigrant family stories and compact frames — Tien 5’11, Jovic 5’7 — yet both have carved pathways that rely on craft, fitness and variety rather than sheer power. Tien will also appear in the doubles draw with Daniil Medvedev. For both, Indian Wells is a homecoming and a moment to return to the other side of the autograph line.

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Abierto Mexicano Telcel ATP ATP 500

Cobolli Downs Tiafoe to Claim Acapulco Title, Poised for Career-High No. 15

Cobolli beats Tiafoe 7-6(4), 6-4 to win Acapulco; third ATP title and a projected rise to No. 15 now

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Flavio Cobolli completed a remarkable week in Acapulco with a 7-6 (4), 6-4 victory over Frances Tiafoe to lift the ATP 500 trophy. The straight-sets scoreline belies a hard-fought encounter that lasted two hours and nine minutes, with the opening set alone running 70 minutes.

The win is Cobolli’s third ATP title and matches the biggest level of his previous triumphs. His first two tour-level trophies came last year, both on clay: Bucharest, an ATP 250, and Hamburg, an ATP 500. With the rankings update on Monday, he is projected to move from No. 20 to a new career-high of No. 15, surpassing his prior peak of No. 17.

Both finalists had dramatic semifinal nights. Cobolli rallied from 3-1 down in the deciding set to beat Miomir Kecmanovic, 7-6 (5), 3-6, 6-4. Tiafoe survived an all-American duel with Brandon Nakashima, 3-6, 7-6 (6), 6-4, after Nakashima served for the match at 6-5 in the second set and then came within two points of victory at 6-all in the tiebreak.

In the final Tiafoe threatened early, holding a 3-1 advantage in the first-set tiebreak before Cobolli edged the set. Tiafoe rallied again in the second, breaking back to level at 4-all, but Cobolli closed the match by winning eight of the final 10 points, breaking for 5-4 and sealing the title with an ace, his 10th of the match.

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The result also carries historical notes. At 23, Cobolli is the youngest champion in Acapulco since a 22-year-old Dominic Thiem won in 2016. He is the first Italian to capture an ATP title this year and, as the nation’s No. 3, will join countrymen Jannik Sinner and Lorenzo Musetti, currently ranked No. 2 and No. 5, in the Top 15.

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ATP BNP Paribas Open Masters

Bouchard: Indian Wells an ideal stage for Ben Shelton to carry U.S. hopes

Bouchard backs Ben Shelton as top U.S. hope at Indian Wells amid Paul and Fritz challenges this week

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The 2026 BNP Paribas Open arrives with main-draw action beginning Wednesday, March 4, and American men figure prominently in the conversation at Tennis Paradise. Eugenie Bouchard singles out a compact group of U.S. contenders and places Ben Shelton at the center of expectations.

Ben Shelton. His game has shown clear evolution and he often lifts his level at the biggest events. With Indian Wells regarded as the premier U.S. tournament after the US Open, the setting feels appropriate for Shelton, who already won a first Masters 1000 title in Canada last summer.

Tommy Paul. After a 2025 season hampered by injury, Paul appears to have recovered and has produced a strong start to 2026. His Delray Beach win over Taylor Fritz—the only American man to win Indian Wells since Andre Agassi in 2001—was certainly a statement about his readiness to return to the Top 10 and beyond. Back to full health in Australia, he played great to reach the second week and gave Carlos Alcaraz all he could handle over three close sets in the fourth round. If he stays healthy and consistent, Paul could be the most dangerous American in the draw.

Taylor Fritz. Local support and familiarity with the event add weight to his prospects. “Total transparency: how can i go against my man in his hometown tournament? A tournament he’s the only one of his countrymen to have won before, no less.” That hometown element and previous success at the event create a compelling backdrop for his campaign.

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Indian Wells will demand serve, return and stamina across large courts and long days. Between Shelton’s upward trajectory, Paul’s return to form and Fritz’s home-court narrative, the U.S. contingent arrives with several credible candidates to produce the best American result as the Sunshine Swing begins.

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