ATP Australian Open Grand Slam
Dino Prizmic returns to Melbourne intent on health, steady progress and a Djokovic reunion
Prizmic aims for health and steady gains after a 2025 Challenger surge and Top 150 breakthrough. 2026
After a breakthrough run on the 2025 ATP Challenger Tour, 20-year-old Dino Prizmic arrives at the Australian hard-court swing with a measured plan: remain healthy and let form follow. The Croatian, now ranked No. 127, says his priority for 2026 is simple. “I know that then everything else will come,” he says.
Prizmic first captured international attention two years earlier when he won the Roland Garros boys’ title. Less than a year later he qualified for his first major main draw at the Australian Open and drew Novak Djokovic, then a 10-time champion. Prizmic pushed the match more than four hours, taking a set off the holder of 24 majors inside Rod Laver Arena before an injury interrupted the momentum he had been building.
A right wrist problem delayed his progress, but 2025 offered a different lesson: the value of consistent match play. Ranked as low as No. 393 last February, Prizmic used a string of Challenger events to rebuild. A semifinal run early in the season prefaced 14 consecutive wins across May and June that lifted him back into the Top 150.
“It helped me a lot that I played many Challenger tournaments very well and I think that’s a great thing for players who are making it from Challenger to ATP tournaments. It offers great transition,” he says. He also acknowledges the grind: “There are a lot of challenges and difficult moments, too. For example, you play the semifinals and get very few points even if you are almost at the end of the tournament.”
Prizmic says he is sharpening his serve and net game and moving away from extended defensive rallies. “I am improving my service and play at the net. I used to be quite defensive and now I am trying to improve that instead of playing long rallies,” he shares. “Of course, we all want to prove ourselves and be as good as possible in tennis, but I’m not thinking about that at the moment. My goal is to play as well as possible and to perform in the biggest tournaments.”
Coached by Luka Kutanjac with Igor Cordas as fitness trainer and a physio in camp, Prizmic came into qualifying having split preseason between Zagreb and Dubai and after qualifying for the US Open and appearing at the Next Gen ATP Finals in Jeddah. The world No. 127 opened his bid to qualify for a second Australian Open with a 6-1, 6-4 win over Genaro Alberto Olivieri.
Djokovic is back in the draw, set to play his 21st main draw, and has earlier offered high praise. “It felt at some point I was playing myself in a mirror already.” Prizmic adds, “I haven’t seen Novak since that match in Australia, but he told me a few things that I remember. If I get the chance, I want to see him again here.”
ATP ATP 500 Barcelona Open Banc Sabadell
Rafael Jodar’s breakout: 19-year-old storms into Barcelona semifinals
Jodar, 19, beat Cam Norrie 6-3, 6-2 to reach Barcelona semis; his backhand and poise stood out. now.
Rafael Jodar, a 19-year-old from Madrid, announced himself as a genuine challenger on clay with a composed, powerful win that sent him into the Barcelona semifinals. The son and grandson who share his name has moved rapidly through the pro ranks this spring.
Jodar beat former Top 10 player Cam Norrie 6-3, 6-2 in 69 minutes, a result that echoed an identical scoreline the two produced in Acapulco earlier this year. It was his eighth consecutive victory and added to a resume that already includes the 2024 US Open boys’ title and an ATP trophy in Marrakesh two weeks ago. He is ranked 51st and is poised to move higher on Monday.
Standing 6’3″, Jodar mixes a flat bomb of a serve with a high kick second option and a forehand that blends pace and topspin. One commentator compared that forehand’s look to Arthur Fils. Yet it is Jodar’s two-handed backhand that drew the clearest notice. When he leans into it the stroke arrives with depth and bullet-like speed that repeatedly troubled Norrie.
A pivotal sequence came at 2-2 in the second set. Jodar reached break point twice and was repelled both times, and on the third occasion Norrie pulled off an excellent drop shot that seemed to shut the door. Jodar reversed direction mid-stride, put his racquet on the ball and redirected it into the open court for a winner and the break. “I think I handled the important moments and the pressure moments in the match very well,” Jodar said. “I think I played those points specifically very well.”
At 4-2 he again seized an opening with a powered backhand winner to close the match. If nerves were expected late, they never appeared.
With this run Jodar joins a rising class of young ATP hopefuls. On Saturday he will face Arthur Fils in what will be his stiffest test yet. “I’m super happy with my performance today,” Jodar said, “but I know I have to keep pushing.”
ATP ATP 500 BMW Open
Zverev and Shelton Settle into Munich Semifinals as Molcan and Cobolli Advance
Shelton and Zverev reached the Munich semifinals; Molcan and Cobolli joined them in the draw on clay
The top two seeds and last year’s finalists, Alexander Zverev and Ben Shelton, both moved into the semifinals at the BMW Open by Bitpanda.
Shelton, the No. 2 seed, survived a stern test from João Fonseca, prevailing 6-3, 3-6, 6-3 in one hour and 49 minutes on Center Court. The 23-year-old struck seven aces and won 84 per cent of his first-service points across the three sets. “It was a much warmer day today with shorter rallies,” Shelton said after his first meeting with the 19-year-old. “He is an electric player, one of the rising stars on the tour. It’s a big match for him and there is a lot of excitement around him. He has many fans around the world, and I was looking forward to it, as it’s the type of atmosphere I like to play in. I’d love playing against him in Brazil one day. That’d be really cool.” Shelton advanced to his 14th ATP Tour semi and will meet Slovakian qualifier Alex Molcan on Saturday.
Molcan, ranked No. 166, beat Denis Shapovaolov 6-4, 6-4 in 78 minutes, winning 57 per cent of the total points. He became the lowest-ranked Munich semi-finalist since world No. 186 Gerald Melzer in 2015. “At the beginning of the week, I wasn’t even sure if I was getting into the tournament. I took a risk, I came here and made into the main draw,” Molcan said. “I am playing well. It feels unreal. The last two years were tough. I was struggling a lot. I had to undergo two surgeries, and it was a pretty dark tennis time for me, but I still believed that I could get back to some good level. Last year at this time I was playing Futures, now I am into the semis of an ATP 500. I don’t even know what to say. I am just proud of myself and my team.”
Top seed Alexander Zverev rallied past Francisco Cerundolo 5-7, 6-0, 6-2 to reach his fifth tour-level semi of the season. The match lasted two hours and 15 minutes. “I was 4-1 up in the first set but then he started playing and returning unbelievably,” Zverev said. “My first-serve percentage was very high, and I returned close to the baseline, so there was nothing I could do. I was happy with my level, even in the first set, and I am definitely happy to earn my first win over Francisco on clay.” In the other quarterfinal, fourth seed Flavio Cobolli defeated Vit Kopriva 6-3, 6-2 in one hour and 26 minutes, breaking serve four times. “It wasn’t easy at all today. We fought for every point. It is always a pleasure to play against him, as he is also a nice guy,” Cobolli said. Zverev will face Cobolli in the other semi.
ATP Madrid Open Masters
Alcaraz and Djokovic Withdraw From Madrid Open as Both Address Injuries
Carlos Alcaraz and Novak Djokovic will miss the Mutua Madrid Open amid ongoing injury recoveries. .
Two of the sport’s biggest names will not compete at the Mutua Madrid Open after separate withdrawals citing injury. Carlos Alcaraz and Novak Djokovic announced they will miss the ATP Masters 1000 event in Madrid.
For Alcaraz it is the second consecutive year he will be absent from his home Masters 1000 tournament. The 22-year-old missed the 2025 edition because of a right leg injury and this week confirmed he will also sit out the Spanish event after withdrawing from the Barcelona Open on Wednesday, citing a right wrist injury.
Alcaraz made a strong start to the clay season by reaching the Monte Carlo final last week, where he lost to Jannik Sinner. That defeat cost him the ATP world No. 1 ranking. He then traveled to Barcelona and told press, “This week is one where I should take a break, but Barcelona is a very special place for me.” He withdrew from the event after winning his opening match. He is next scheduled to compete in Rome and at Roland Garros, where he is the defending champion at the French Open.
On social media Alcaraz wrote: “Some news is incredibly hard to share. Madrid is home, one of the most special places on the calendar to me, and that’s why it hurts so much not being able to play here for the second year in a row,” and added, “It especially hurts not to be in front of my people, in a tournament that means so much. Thanks for your love always and I hope to see you all soon.” He also posted: “Madrid, unfortunately I won’t be able to compete @MutuaMadridOpen this year. I’m continuing my recovery in order to be back soon. Hasta pronto!”
Earlier the same day three-time Madrid champion Novak Djokovic announced he would not play in Madrid, the third time in four years he has missed the event, also absent in 2023 and 2024. “I’m continuing my recovery in order to come back soon,” he wrote. “Hasta pronto! (See you soon!)”
© 2026 Mateo Villalba
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