ATP Australian Open Grand Slam
The Big T Ep. 5 — Australian Open debrief with Gilbert, Vandeweghe and Collins
A measured Australian Open debrief from The Big T panel on finals, timeouts and standout performances.
Episode 5 of The Big T podcast offers a focused post‑Australian Open conversation, assembling Brad Gilbert, Coco Vandeweghe and guest Danielle Collins to unpack the first major of the season. The panel turned to the big narratives: turning points in finals, controversial medical timeouts and the performances that defined the fortnight.
The show revisited Aryna Sabalenka’s finals record after her loss to Elena Rybakina. “Over the last 16 majors, she has been by far the best player—for the first 11, 12 days,” said Gilbert, former coach of Coco Gauff (who handed Sabalenka one of those major final defeats). “But [in finals], she doesn’t seem to play her best tennis, and she’s lost some leads now.” Instead of having four majors, she might have seven or eight. Brad Gilbert on Aryna Sabalenka
Ticketed among the most debated ideas was Australian Open tournament director Craig Tiley’s proposal that matches from the quarterfinals onward should be best of five sets for both men and women. That suggestion prompted strong disagreement. Collins was blunt in her reply: “I think we gotta do away with the three out of five, we just gotta flush that down the toilet,” said the former Australian Open finalist. “These matches are way too long, Brad!”
Discussion shifted to the men’s side, where Novak Djokovic and Carlos Alcaraz earned dramatic wins in semis to reach the final. I thought he was playing Pete Sampras-like. Brad Gilbert on Novak Djokovic The panel also noted Jannik Sinner’s recent form; he went a combined 131-12 in 2024 and 2025, and Sinner managed only 2 for 18 on break points against Djokovic in their semi.
The Alcaraz–Zverev semifinal was examined for both its quality and the disputed medical timeout that followed cramping, pickle juice and controversy. “I have a two-part answer to that,” she said. “One, I would have absolutely taken every ability to get into a Grand Slam final. So I would have done what Carlos did.” But, “also, for Zverev, I would have absolutely called him out.” You would have went full Karen on him? Danielle Collins to Coco Vandeweghe Vandeweghe: “I would have absolutely lost my gosh darn mind.” Despite Zverev serving for the match, Alcaraz would go on to prevail in the dramatic classic, 6-4, 7-6 (5), 6-7 (3), 6-7 (4), 7-5.
The episode also includes lighter segments: BG as Dr. Feinberg: Bank or Shank? The Big T panel includes Brad Gilbert, Coco Vandeweghe, Andrea Petkovic and Mark Petchey. A listener called about drop shots and the hosts answered questions about match tactics and past encounters.
ATP Australian Open Grand Slam
How Carlos Alcaraz’s 2026 Australian Open victory changed his career ledger
Alcaraz completed the Career Slam in 2026, added his seventh major, and surpassed 13,000 points. 26
Carlos Alcaraz’s title at the 2026 Australian Open delivered a run of milestones that altered his place in the sport. He won the title after rallying from a set down to beat Novak Djokovic in the final, 2-6, 6-2, 6-3, 7-5, and earlier edged Alexander Zverev in a semifinal epic in which he battled back from the brink of defeat and overcame cramps. He had stormed past his first five opponents in straight sets en route to the title.
That triumph completed his Career Grand Slam. He is the ninth man in tennis history to do so and the youngest ever to complete the set at 22 years and 8 months, surpassing the previous mark set by Don Budge at 22 years and 11 months. He is also the first man to complete a Career Slam at the Australian Open. The list of players who previously completed the Career Slam includes Fred Perry, Don Budge, Roy Emerson, Rod Laver, Andre Agassi, Roger Federer, Rafael Nadal and Novak Djokovic.
The victory was his seventh Grand Slam title. His major tally now reads one Australian Open (2026), two Roland Garros titles (2024, 2025), two Wimbledons (2023, 2024) and two US Opens (2022, 2025). He has won seven of the 20 Grand Slams he has contested and seven of the last 13 majors he has played, stretches that date to the 2022 US Open. He missed the 2023 Australian Open with a leg injury.
The win produced several other markers. He became the youngest man ever to reach seven major titles, moved to 7-1 in Grand Slam finals with his sole loss coming to Jannik Sinner in last year’s Wimbledon final, and became the first player to beat Djokovic in an Australian Open final. Since the tournament switched to hard courts in 1988, he is the sixth man to claim back-to-back hard-court majors at the US Open and Australian Open.
Statistically he improved an already stellar résumé. His Grand Slam career record rose to 91-13 for an 87.5 percent winning percentage. He now has 25 career titles, bringing his total of wins over Top 10 opponents to 55 after victories over Alex de Minaur, Alexander Zverev and Novak Djokovic at this event. His 25th title pushed him past Sinner and Zverev (24) and left him second among active men in career titles behind Novak Djokovic. Alcaraz also surpassed 13,000 ranking points for the first time, moving from 12,050 to 13,650.
ATP Australian Open Grand Slam
Offseason Focus: How Eliot Spizzirri’s Boca Raton block set up his Australian Open breakthrough
Docuseries access to Eliot Spizzirri’s Boca Raton off-season set up his Australian Open run and rise.
Eliot Spizzirri credits the work he did away from the spotlight for his early 2026 momentum. The 24-year-old began the year 4–2 and at a new career-high of world No. 71, after a statement run to the third round of the Australian Open that followed an intensive offseason training block.
Documentary cameras were granted access as Spizzirri and his team prepared in Boca Raton, training there with coaches Patrick Hirscht and Christopher Williams during tennis’ limited offseason. He is one of the subjects of Off Season, Ground Pass Podcast’s cinematic YouTube docu-series, which explores the reset players undertake between campaigns. Episode 1, titled “Rest,” finds Spizzirri training in Boca Raton, home to Evert Academy and an offseason base for many American and international players.
“I like the lifestyle a lot. My dad’s here. I think at the end of this year I’ll have to buy my own place,” he says, laughing. “Living with my parents at 25? I don’t think that’s in the cards.”
The series is narrated by former ATP player turned analyst Chris Eubanks, directed by Anastasia Folorunso, and shot by cinematographer Emily Kordovich. “He’s just a workhorse,” Eubanks said of Spizzirri. “He’s a guy who’s not an easy out. When you step foot on court with him, it doesn’t matter what lead you have—he’s never going to give up.”
Spizzirri began the season ranked world No. 89. He qualified in Auckland and reached the quarterfinals of that ATP 250 event, recording wins over Cristian Garin, Juan Manuel Cerúndolo, Adrian Mannarino, and Nuno Borges. He then made a splash in his Australian Open main-draw debut, upsetting No. 32 seed João Fonseca and defeating Yibing Wu to reach the third round of a major for the first time. He took a set from world No. 2 and two-time defending champion Jannik Sinner in Melbourne; Sinner did not drop a set to anyone else at the tournament apart from Novak Djokovic.
Spizzirri is next scheduled to compete in qualifying at the Delray Beach Open, aiming to reach the ATP 250 main draw when the tournament begins on February 16. Off Season premiered on YouTube on January 18, with new episodes every other Sunday; the next installment arrives February 15.
250 ATP Open Occitanie
Arthur Fils wins on comeback at Open Occitanie after back injury
Arthur Fils returned from a back stress fracture to win in Montpellier with 50 winners and 14 aces.
No. 6 seed Arthur Fils made a successful return to competition at the Open Occitanie, his first event since early August 2025 following a lower back injury. The 21-year-old produced 50 winners, including 14 aces, to defeat countryman Valentin Royer 7-6(7), 6-7(4), 6-2 in two hours and 33 minutes in Montpellier.
“It’s been a while since I last competed, so returning to the circuit is great,” Fils told press during Media Day. “I feel a lot of joy and happiness. I’m very excited to be back on the courts with so many fans.
“It’s been a long process. I’m back, so that means everything is positive, both mentally and physically.”
Fils withdrew from Roland Garros in May 2025 after suffering a lower back injury that was later diagnosed as a stress fracture during a five-set, four-and-a-half-hour second-round battle against Jaume Munar. That match was later selected as the second-best of 2025, according to Steve Tignor.
He tried to resume play in Canada in August 2025, winning a singles match and teaming with Ben Shelton to reach a doubles quarterfinal, but the comeback was short-lived. He then announced that he would shut down his season to recover. “Excluding Roland Garros, I think withdrawing from the Masters 1000 in Paris was the hardest moment,” he said in Montpellier.
The injury interrupted a rapid rise: Fils climbed to a career-high No. 14 in April 2025 after runs to the quarterfinals at Indian Wells, Miami (including a win over world No. 2 Alexander Zverev) and Monte Carlo, and a semifinal in Barcelona. Now ranked No. 42, he arrives in Montpellier determined to rebuild and defend points.
Fils skipped the opening weeks of the 2026 season, missing the Australian swing while continuing rehabilitation, a decision he outlined in a vlog on his YouTube channel. He has worked with a nutritionist and said he lost “six or seven kilos since Roland Garros.” “I’m 21, I still have around 10 to 15 years of career [ahead], so it’s not a race,” he added. “I work with a lot of people to try to start fresh … and I think that now I’m on the right track, so I’ve got to continue.”
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