ATP Australian Open Grand Slam
Sinner’s Australian Open wardrobe splits opinion as he advances to third round
Sinner’s olive and lemon kit split opinion while he advances into the Australian Open third round…
Two-time defending champion Jannik Sinner has been untroubled on court in Melbourne, but his choice of matchwear has generated headlines of its own.
The world No. 2 returned to Rod Laver Arena to face Hugo Gaston wearing NikeCourt’s Men’s Slam Dri-FIT polo and matching shorts. For night sessions he has been in a muddy olive green, while daytime matches have featured a bright lemon yellow set. The contrasting colorways have prompted a wide range of reactions online, from praise for the bold choices to sharp criticism. One outlet even ran a headline asking, “Is Jannik Sinner’s Australian Open outfit the worst in the history of tennis?” with a verdict of “YES.”
Sinner appears unbothered by the debate. After a pre-tournament charity match in which he wore a head-to-toe neon yellow kit, he laughed about having a say in future colour choices: “Next year I have a little bit more of a say in the colors!” “But I’m very, very happy to wear this outfit.”
A viral graphic that has circulated on social media compared Sinner’s recent kits to condiments, grouping them as “Yellow Mustard,” “Mayo,” last year’s red Roland Garros kit as “Tomato Ketchup,” and this week’s olive look as “Dill Relish,” a lineup nicknamed the ‘Sauce Slam.’ The discussion even spilled into a live studio panel where, when host Steve Weissman asked Prakash Amritraj, Lindsey Davenport and Martina Navratilova to pick a favorite, the panel was divided. “Oh man… Favorite? Well, maybe the favorite hasn’t shown up yet!” Navratilova said, later predicting “It’s going to be Vegemite next year, Vegemite brown.”
Off court Sinner’s personal style is more restrained. As a Gucci ambassador he has described preferring simple, functional pieces: “In my wardrobe, there are a lot of very simple t-shirts. White or black, usually, because I travel around a lot,” and added, “For sure a nice jacket has to be there.”
On court the focus remains on results. Sinner extended his run at the tournament without dropping a set through his opening matches; Hugo Gaston retired trailing 6-2, 6-1, and on Thursday night Sinner beat James Duckworth 6-1, 6-4, 6-2 to reach the third round and extend a 16-match win streak at the event. He is chasing his fifth Grand Slam title and a third straight Australian Open crown.
ATP Masters Miami Open
Three Miami Open Quarterfinals to Watch: Muchova-Mboko, Michelsen-Sinner, Gauff-Bencic
Muchova vs Mboko, Michelsen vs Sinner, and Gauff vs Bencic: three must-see Miami Open quarterfinals.
This day’s slate at the Miami Open centers on three intriguing quarterfinals that promise contrasting styles and storylines.
Karolina Muchova arrives off a 6-0, 6-2 win over Alex Eala, but Victoria Mboko is hardly an easy draw. “I just know it’s going to be very tough,” Mboko says of facing Muchova. Mboko lost to Muchova in the Doha final last month, 6-4, 7-5, yet she brings credentials of her own: she is ranked five spots higher (No. 9 to 14), reached the Indian Wells quarterfinals where she fell in two tight sets to Aryna Sabalenka, and recently beat Mirra Andreeva in three sets. Mboko’s game currently leans on groundstroke pace and foot speed; her stated objective is to extract more free points from her serve. “Hopefully I can kind of just work with my game and just see what patterns I could do, or whatever I can do to try to gain more free points,” Mboko says. Muchova has more variety to deploy, but she can be overpowered, as Iga Swiatek showed with a 6-2, 6-0 victory at Indian Wells. Winner: Mboko
On the men’s side, Sebastian Korda recently stunned Carlos Alcaraz, and Alex Michelsen will attempt a similar leap when he meets Jannik Sinner. The 21-year-old Californian has shown signs of growth: a Brisbane semifinal to start the year, three wins at Indian Wells including over Taylor Fritz, and two tight Miami wins, over Norrie and Tabilo, both 6-4 in the third. Michelsen has lost twice to Sinner; their first meeting in Cincinnati in 2024 finished 6-4, 7-5 and was closer than the score suggests, while a month later at the US Open Sinner lost just six games in three sets. Sinner is chasing his first Sunshine Double and is a three-time Miami finalist. The 6’4″ Michelsen brings more serve heat than Sinner’s recent opponents. Sinner is the favorite, but Michelsen is maturing and the crowd could matter. Winner: Sinner
Coco Gauff reaches her first Miami quarterfinal in seven appearances after three three-set wins over unseeded opponents. “There’s always that extra layer,” Gauff says of playing in South Florida, where she grew up and still lives. “You just see familiar faces in the crowd. You don’t want to disappoint them.” Her opponent, Belinda Bencic, is a counter-puncher; the two met four times in 2025 with Gauff winning three, two of them in three sets, and Bencic taking the Indian Wells rematch 6-4 in the third. Expect long points and momentum swings.
1000 ATP Miami Open
Sinner Breaks Masters 1000 Record with 26 Straight Sets
Jannik Sinner reached 26, consecutive sets won at Masters 1000 events after beating Moutet in Miami.
Jannik Sinner extended an uninterrupted run of dominance at Masters 1000 level, setting a new record for consecutive sets won at that tournament tier.
By beating Corentin Moutet in the third round of the Miami Open, 6-1, 6-4, Sinner reached 26 straight sets won at Masters 1000 events, surpassing Novak Djokovic’s previous mark of 24 set wins in a row from 2016. The victory moves the Italian ahead in the record books for streaks that date back to 1990, when Masters-level tournaments began.
Sinner’s run includes flawless performances at the two most recent Masters 1000 tournaments. He captured Paris last fall without dropping a set (10-0) and followed that by sweeping Indian Wells last week (12-0). In Miami, he tied Djokovic’s long-standing record two days earlier with a 6-3, 6-3 win over Damir Dzumhur in his opening match at the event. The straight-sets win over Moutet then took him past the previous high-water mark.
The streak reflects consecutive completed sets won at Masters 1000 events; note that a walkover loss would end the run. With the Miami Open still under way, Sinner’s sequence now stands as the longest such streak in Masters 1000 history.
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ATP Masters Miami Open
Miami Open’s new ‘Love All’ frosé highlights tennis’ booming signature-drink market
Miami Open’s new ‘Love All’ frosé shows how signature cocktails have become big business in tennis..
The Miami Open has added a new entry to a growing list of tournament signature drinks with the Love All frosé. Created exclusively for the 2026 Miami Open by Santa Margherita Wines, the tournament’s official wine sponsor, the frozen rosé cocktail is priced at $22 and served in a collectible glass shaped like a tennis ball. It is sold at the Rosé Giardino, an all-pink lounge at Hard Rock Stadium that has become a popular photo stop and draws long lines.
Players sampled the drink on the Players Box podcast. Jessica Pegula, Madison Keys, Jennifer Brady and Desirae Krawczyk offered largely positive reviews, with Brady the lone dissenter, due to her general dislike of wine. “It’s very good,” Keys said, laughing, as she gave it a 4.5 out of 5. “It’s quite strong… If you drink them during our matches, just like, keep the volume down!”
The Love All joins an expanding set of tournament beverages that now form a meaningful revenue stream. Wimbledon’s Pimm’s Cup and strawberries and cream remain long-standing traditions, but the US Open’s Honey Deuce transformed the idea into a major commercial success. Introduced in 2006 and sold exclusively at the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center, the Honey Deuce is made with Grey Goose vodka, lemonade and raspberry liqueur and topped with honeydew melon balls. Priced at $23 and served in a collectible cup, the drink grew into a significant income source: more than 738,400 Honey Deuces were sold in 2025, generating roughly $17 million in revenue, a 32 percent increase from the previous year driven in part by expanded Fan Week programming.
Other recent additions include the Ace Paloma from Maestro Dobel Tequila, introduced in 2023 and served at multiple events, plus player-inspired cocktails such as the MargAryna with Aryna Sabalenka and the Fritzy Spicy with Taylor Fritz, which debuted at the US Open in 2024. The Charleston Open offers First Serve, Canada’s National Bank Open has The Smash, the Australian Open added the Lemon Ace in 2025, and Indian Wells introduced The Drop Shot earlier this month. Limited-edition cups and branded experiences, amplified by social media, have intensified the appeal of these offerings. With beverage margins often exceeding 90 percent, signature drinks are proving both culturally resonant and commercially powerful for tournaments.
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