1000 ATP 500 Qatar TotalEnergies Open
February gains traction as Doha and Dubai draw top fields
Alcaraz and Sinner headline Doha; Rybakina leads a strong field at the Dubai WTA 1000. In February .
February is beginning to matter more on the tour calendar as upgraded events in the Middle East attract big names. The ATP 500 in Doha now hosts the sport’s top two players, and the WTA 1000 in Dubai features a deep draw led by a recent major champion.
Also: For fans who don’t have the patience for the new, extended Masters 1000s, February still gets its tournaments done the old-fashioned way, in a week.
Doha presents a rare early-season showdown. The Spaniard and the Italian are the top two seeds, with Carlos Alcaraz arriving fresh from completing the career Slam in Melbourne and still only 22. Jannik Sinner follows as the No. 2 seed after a loss Down Under that ended a three-year streak without defeat. Their draws include heavyweights in both halves: Alcaraz’s side lists Daniil Medvedev, Karen Khachanov and Andrey Rublev, while Sinner’s half contains Alexander Bublik, Jiri Lehecka and Jakub Mensik. Khachanov won this title in 2023 and Medvedev in 2024. Bublik beat Sinner once in 2025.
Dubai’s WTA 1000 field is likewise strong, with eight of the tour’s top 10 entered. Two notable absences are Aryna Sabalenka and Iga Swiatek, but Elena Rybakina headlines after capturing her second major at the Australian Open and sustaining the tour’s best form since last fall. Rybakina lost to Victoria Mboko in Doha last week and faces potential obstacles in her quarter in the form of Elina Svitolina and Belinda Bencic.
Behind Rybakina on the seed list are Amanda Anisimova, Coco Gauff and Jessica Pegula. Anisimova dropped 990 ranking points after an opening-round loss in Doha and will begin here against Barbora Krejcikova. Gauff also fell in her Doha opener and may be using Dubai mainly as serve practice ahead of the larger hard-court swing. Victoria Mboko and Karolina Muchova, the Doha finalists last week, are absent from this draw, leaving room for other contenders to make deep runs.
1000 Player News Qatar TotalEnergies Open
Victoria Mboko navigates favorite status after Doha final defeat
Mboko lost 6-4, 7-5 to Karolina Muchova in Doha and will make her Top 10 debut on Monday final loss.
Victoria Mboko, the Canadian teenager set to enter the Top 10 on Monday, left Doha with a clear sense of progress despite falling short in the championship match. Six months after winning her first WTA 1000 title, Mboko carried that momentum into the 2026 season and reached a second WTA 1000 final at the Qatar TotalEnergies Open.
In the title match she ran into Karolina Muchova and lost 6-4, 7-5. The scoreline reflected a tight contest in which Mboko surrendered a handful of decisive points to a more experienced opponent. Earlier in the week she produced consecutive victories over Top 10 players in Doha, wins that secured her Top 10 debut and underlined how quickly her status on tour has changed.
The shift from underdog to favorite is a new challenge for Mboko. Reaching a second WTA 1000 final in the span of six months confirmed her arrival among the tour’s leading players, but converting that form into another title proved difficult against a player with greater match experience in big finals. The loss to Muchova denied Mboko a second WTA 1000 trophy but did not erase the larger gains of the week.
For now, Mboko will take the ranking milestone and the lessons from the Doha final into the remainder of the 2026 season. The sequence of back-to-back Top 10 victories and a second WTA 1000 final represent a substantive step forward. While the final result was disappointing, the results in Doha delivered both validation and a clearer sense of the expectations that will accompany her as she begins life in the Top 10.
1000 Player News Qatar TotalEnergies Open
Sabalenka, Swiatek withdrawals highlight players managing the tight Middle East swing
Top players skip Dubai as quick Middle East swing, tight turnarounds drive schedule choices. in 2026
Top players’ absences from Dubai and players’ comments in Doha underlined a growing strategy to manage back-to-back WTA 1000 events.
Maria Sakkari, fresh from a semifinal loss to Karolina Muchova, made no secret of how little energy she had for the next tournament. “Right now, I have no energy at all,” joked Maria Sakkari after a semifinal defeat to Karolina Muchova in Doha. “I need food. I need fuel.” Unseeded in both draws and a former world No. 3, Sakkari said she will travel from Doha to the Dubai Duty Free Tennis Championships on Sunday and, mindful of the quick turnaround, added, “I hope the supervisor puts me on Monday.”
The world’s top two players announced withdrawals from Dubai on Sunday afternoon. “Unfortunately, I am not feeling 100 per cent,” Sabalenka said in a statement. “I hope I will come back next year to experience the great tournament,” Swiatek said after her quarterfinal exit in Doha, the Pole citing a “change in schedule” as her reason for withdrawing. Sabalenka has skipped four of the last six WTA 1000 tournaments, while Swiatek has generally played a fuller schedule since first becoming world No. 1 in 2022.
Sakkari reflected on those choices: “I think, on their level, I mean, it’s the No. 1 and No. 2 in the world, they can basically be more selective with what they play,” mused Sakkari, who wasn’t aware of their absences. “I don’t know if it’s injury or fatigue related, but probably they thought that it’s the right thing to do for them.” She also described her own planning: “We decided that we’re going to play a more reduced calendar,” and added, “Not that that means that I’m going to play 10, 12 tournaments a year, but we’re not going to chase stupidly points and tournaments.”
Jelena Ostapenko, who lost in the Doha semifinals to Victoria Mboko and who played both singles and doubles, asked the media to keep questions short and warned of the schedule: “It’s a very quick turnaround because, even like last year making the finals here, this year playing semis, you cannot really enjoy it, because you have like one day, like the maximum one day just to, you know, to relax a bit and then you have to be in a game mode again,” “It’s a very quick turnaround for a 1000 event.”
Nineteen-year-old Victoria Mboko, the Doha finalist, stressed training and recovery: “I think training plays a big part, the way you train, putting a lot of emphasis on fitness,” and said, “But yeah, I think just, from a recovery standpoint and doing good physio, having good fitness and good routines help you kind of last longer in that sense. I’m trying to improve that in a way. I mean, we’re always focused on it, but I think it’s important to also prioritize everything else off court that’s not related to tennis.”
1000 Qatar TotalEnergies Open
Victoria Mboko credits injury-free stretch as she reaches second WTA 1000 final
Mboko credits an injury-free stretch and added match rhythm for her surge to a WTA 1000 final. today
Victoria Mboko continued her rapid ascent on the WTA tour with a composed 6-3, 6-2 win over two-time finalist Jelena Osapenko, advancing to her second WTA 1000 final in six months and securing a debut in the Top 10. The 19-year-old Canadian, who is the reigning Omnium Banque Nationale champion, has combined form and fitness in a breakout start to 2026.
Q. You are still so young, but I’m assuming that you have gone through ups and downs already. So if you had to pick one specific tournament or match, or like an important decision, switching coaches or changing the practice environment, which one do you say that was sort of the turning point of your career?
VICTORIA MBOKO: I mean, I wouldn’t say there is a significant turning point. Last year I just wanted to start off playing a lot of lower-tier tournaments. I mean, of course my ranking wasn’t helping me getting into higher tournaments.
I think in the past I struggled with a lot of injuries as a junior, and I wasn’t able to play that many tournaments. I think in two years I only, I didn’t play that many matches.
So my goal for last year was just to play a lot of tournaments, collect rhythm, get a lot of matches under my belt, and slowly try to do better the next week. Little did I know that I was playing in the WTA events sooner than I thought. I tried to capitalize on how many matches and tournaments I played to my advantage. I think gradually throughout the year, especially last year, trying to find my footing helped me a lot, and made me gain a lot of confidence within myself and with my game.
Mboko has been in excellent form since the start of the season, reaching the final at the Adelaide International and the fourth round at the Australian Open. In her Doha run she produced back-to-back Top 10 victories over Mirra Andreeva and Elena Rybakina, the latter coming fresh off a title run at the Australian Open. Her performances have underlined a consistency that had been interrupted by injuries during her junior years.
Awaiting Mboko in the final will be either Maria Sakkari or Karolina Muchova. “I don’t really know either of their games that well,” admitted Mboko. “They made it this far, so I know they’re playing pretty good tennis. Yeah, I don’t want to change something up because what I’ve been doing has been working so far.”
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