1000 ATP BNP Paribas Open
Eisenhower Cup Field Revealed: Rybakina and Fritz Back to Defend; Swiatek Reunites with Ruud
Rybakina and Fritz return to defend the Eisenhower Cup; Swiatek and Ruud reunite in Stadium 2 a week
The Eisenhower Cup, a Tie Break Tens event that has become a mixed doubles showcase at the BNP Paribas Open, returns a week from Tuesday inside Stadium 2 with an eight-team field mixing familiar duos and new pairings.
Elena Rybakina and Taylor Fritz are back to defend the title they won last year, when the pair shared $200,000. Fritz arrives as a proven mixed-doubles performer; he was one half of a winning pairing with Aryna Sabalenka in 2023.
Emma Navarro and Ben Shelton will team up for the third consecutive year. The American duo captured the event in their debut two years ago. Also reuniting, and appearing together in the California desert for the first time, are Iga Swiatek and Casper Ruud. Team Ruudtek reached the final in their debut at the 2025 US Open, winning three matches on the way to a runner-up finish in New York.
Several partnerships from the 2024 edition have been refreshed. Jessica Pegula and Tommy Paul return as a team, as do Leylah Fernandez and Felix Auger-Aliassime. Tommy Paul narrowly missed winning the event 12 months ago when he partnered Madison Keys.
Amanda Anisimova, a two-time Grand Slam finalist, has a new partner after playing with Daniil Medvedev the previous year. She will pair with Andrey Rublev, who previously participated in 2024 alongside Maria Sakkari. Medvedev is also back in the field with a new teammate: defending BNP Paribas Open women’s champion Mirra Andreeva, a pairing that follows their appearance together at the 2024 Paris Olympics.
One experienced doubles competitor, Jasmine Paolini, will form an all-Italian tandem with Matteo Berrettini. Paolini played with Lorenzo Musetti in last year’s event.
The Eisenhower Cup remains a compact, spectator-friendly addition to the Indian Wells schedule, offering quick, high-energy mixed doubles matches and a lineup that blends repeat contenders with newly formed teams.
1000 ATP Monte Carlo
Sinner reclaims world No. 1 with Monte-Carlo win over defending champion Alcaraz
Sinner defeated Carlos Alcaraz 7-6(5), 6-3 to win Monte-Carlo and regain world No. 1 ranking Monday
Jannik Sinner ended Carlos Alcaraz’s title defence with a straight-sets victory in the Rolex Monte-Carlo Masters final on Sunday, prevailing 7-6(5), 6-3. The match was the rivals’ first head-to-head meeting of 2026 and delivered a landmark result for Sinner on clay.
The win provided Sinner with his first Masters 1000 title on clay and his eighth Masters 1000 crown overall. By taking the Monte-Carlo trophy he completed a run that included Indian Wells and Miami earlier in the season, becoming the second man, alongside Novak Djokovic 11 years ago in 2015, to win those three events in the same season.
Sinner’s triumph also returns him to the top of the rankings. He will begin his 67th week at world No. 1 on Monday. The Monte-Carlo final underlined Sinner’s consistency through the early part of the season and his capacity to convert hard-court success into major results on clay.
Alcaraz arrived at the tournament as the defending champion but was unable to overturn Sinner in their latest encounter. The final scoreline reflected a tight opening set decided in a tiebreak before Sinner imposed himself in the second set to close out the match.
This victory in Monte Carlo further cements Sinner’s standing at the top of the game in 2026 and marks a notable clay-court milestone in his career. The achievement of winning Indian Wells, Miami and Monte Carlo in a single season places him alongside a rare group of players who have combined the early hard-court masters events with the Monte-Carlo title in the same year.
1000 ATP Monte Carlo
Alcaraz Beats Vacherot to Reach 10th Masters 1000 Final, Sets Sunday No. 1 Showdown
Alcaraz beat Vacherot to reach his 10th Masters 1000 final and 20th major-level final overall. today
Carlos Alcaraz advanced to the Monte Carlo final with a straight-sets victory over home favorite Valentin Vacherot, 6-4, 6-4. Alcaraz broke in the third game to take the first set and secured a second pivotal break in the penultimate game before serving out the match.
Vacherot had produced a landmark run, becoming the first Monegasque to reach the semifinals at Monte Carlo in the Open Era and the first home player to reach the quarterfinals in the Open Era. Despite the crowd and confidence on Vacherot’s side, Alcaraz controlled the key moments to move through.
The world No. 1 will face world No. 2 Jannik Sinner on Sunday, with the winner set to claim the No. 1 ranking on Monday. “It’s the dream spot for everyone,” the Spaniard said. “I’m fighting for my second Monte Carlo title, I think he’s fighting for his first one, and it’s going to be a really special one with No. 1 on the line, so that makes tomorrow even more special.
“For me I’m just happy to win this really difficult match against Valentin. I think he’s playing really great tennis with a lot of confidence right now, playing in his home town.
“I’m really excited about my first meeting against Jannik in 2026. Let’s see how it’s going to be tomorrow.”
The victory also marked a personal milestone: Alcaraz is through to the 10th Masters 1000 final of his career. He becomes just the third player in the series’ history since 1990 to reach that many before turning 23, after Rafael Nadal and Novak Djokovic. Alcaraz has been dominant in Masters finals, going 8-1 in his first nine appearances at that level.
His lone defeat in a Masters final was a narrow three-set loss to Novak Djokovic; Alcaraz led 7-5, 4-2 and even held a match point up 6-5 in the second-set tiebreak before falling 5-7, 7-6 (7), 7-6 (4) after three hours and 49 minutes.
This will also be the milestone 20th “big” final of his career: eight Grand Slam finals (7-1), one ATP Finals final (0-1), one Olympic final (0-1) and now 10 Masters 1000 finals (going 8-1 in his first nine).
1000 ATP Monte Carlo
Sinner Downs Zverev to Reach First Monte Carlo Final, Extends Win Streak to 16
Sinner beat Zverev 6-1, 6-4 to reach his first Monte Carlo final and extend a 16-match streak today.
Jannik Sinner continued his dominant run with a straight-sets victory over Alexander Zverev, defeating the German 6-1, 6-4 to reach his first final at the Rolex Monte-Carlo Masters. The world No. 2 recorded his eighth consecutive win over Zverev and pushed his overall streak to 16 matches.
Sinner broke immediately after Zverev misfired a crosscourt backhand, then converted a second break after punishing a mid-court ball with a forehand winner. A third break, sealed by a backhand up the line, closed out a one-sided opening set.
In the second set Zverev steadied, holding from 30 in each of his first four service games, but he failed to generate any meaningful chances on return. With Zverev serving to stay in the match, Sinner produced a strong defensive sequence to create match point and closed with a forehand winner. The Italian finished the match with a 9.6 performance rating, according to Infosys ATP Stats tracking.
“We came here trying to give myself some feedback. Now finding myself in the final means a lot to me,” Sinner told ATP Media. “I’m very happy with this performance. I felt really solid from the beginning. When you’re a break up from the beginning, it changes the dynamic of the match.”
The 24-year-old has now reached the final at eight different Masters 1000 events, matching a milestone previously achieved only by each member of the Big Four since the series began in 1990. He is aiming for his first clay-court title since 2022 Umag and this represents his second Masters 1000 final on clay after 2025 Rome. Sinner is also the first player since Novak Djokovic 11 years ago to appear in the season’s first three Masters 1000 finals, having completed his maiden Sunshine Double in March at Indian Wells and Miami.
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