ATP BNP Paribas Open Masters
Sinner the Pick as Learner Tien’s Indian Wells Run Meets a Stiffer Test
Tien has dazzled at Indian Wells, but Sinner enters as the favorite after a tough build-up tonight.
Start Time: TBD on Thursday, March 11 (check back for updates)
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Learner Tien, just 20, has been playing like a seasoned competitor at Indian Wells. He is 4-0 in tiebreakers at the event and has out-dueled two more experienced opponents, Ben Shelton and Alejandro Davidovich Fokina, in three-set matches. Against Davidovich Fokina he even saved a match point with an acutely-angled crosscourt slice forehand pass.
That string of results and the crowd support that has followed him at Indian Wells set the stage for a tough quarterfinal against the second seed, Jannik Sinner. Their only prior meeting came last fall in Beijing, where Sinner won 6-2, 6-2. Still, this is a different setting and Tien has clearly improved since then.
Tien’s serve, once a relative weakness, has climbed to as high as 125 MPH. He also carries more power behind swings that were already praised for their feel and intelligence. Those developments explain why he has extended matches against higher-ranked opponents and thrived in tight moments.
Sinner presents a contrasting challenge. The more pace and aggression opponents bring, the more Sinner tends to return. He arrives after a taxing match of his own, a two-tiebreaker test against Joao Fonseca, and the latest encounter suggests he is battle-ready.
On balance, Tien’s growth and the crowd’s energy make this a compelling matchup, but Sinner’s consistency under pressure and his recent form keep him the favorite to advance.
Winner: Sinner
ATP Madrid Open Masters
Madrid quarterfinal preview: Sinner’s streak, Sabalenka’s run and Jodar’s moment
Sinner’s streak, Sabalenka’s run and a rookie’s surge set the stage for Madrid quarterfinal intrigue
The Madrid quarterfinals present contrasting storylines across the men’s and women’s draws. On paper, the headline matchup looks straightforward, but each match carries its own shades of risk.
Sinner and Norrie will meet for the first time despite eight years on tour together. Sinner is No. 1 and arrives with 19 straight wins and three consecutive titles. Norrie is No. 23 and 14-9 for the year; his last tournament victory came in 2023. Sinner is described as having the stronger serve, forehand and backhand and is six years younger. Norrie, however, has climbed from the mid-80s in the rankings as of last July, owns five career titles with two on clay and is a stubborn, pesky competitor known for his speed, effort and fist pumps. His craft has troubled top players before, notably Carlos Alcaraz. Against Sinner he will be forced to scramble on return, extend rallies and fight for every point. Winner: Sinner
On the women’s side, Baptiste, 24, has steadily pushed into the higher echelons, reaching a career-high No. 32 and turning big-match opportunities into results. In Miami she beat Svitolina and Ostapenko before losing to Sabalenka in the quarterfinals. In Madrid she has already beaten Paolini and Bencic to reach another quarterfinal against the world No. 1. Their Miami meeting was a 6-4, 6-4 win for Sabalenka. Baptiste possesses an equally heavy serve and forehand, can produce flat backhand winners and may offer superior transition and front-court play. In that previous encounter she was, in the crunch, a touch less confident and a bit more error-prone than Sabalenka. The top seed comes in on a 15-match winning streak. Winner: Sabalenka
This feels like a trap match for Rafael Jodar, a 19-year-old rookie thriving in front of his home crowds after victories over No. 5 seed Alex De Minaur and No. 27 seed Joao Fonseca. A win would likely set up a blockbuster with Sinner. Standing in his way is Vit Kopriva, a 66th-ranked, 28-year-old grinder described as a tennis lifer. At 5’10” and 152 pounds, Kopriva favors clay, likes rallies and creates from the baseline. Earlier this year he reached the semifinals at the 500 in Rio and earlier this week he knocked out 2024 Madrid champion Andrey Rublev.
ATP Grand Slam Masters
Alcaraz Loses 3,000 Points but Is Secure at No. 2 Through Clay Season
Alcaraz will lose 3,000 ranking points after skipping Rome and Roland Garros yet will keep No. 2 now
Carlos Alcaraz confirmed he will miss both the Rome Masters and Roland Garros because of a right wrist injury, tournaments he won last year. By skipping those title defenses he will surrender 3,000 ranking points in total — 1,000 from Rome and 2,000 from Roland Garros — reducing his current total from 12,960 to 9,960 by the end of the clay-court season.
Despite that drop, Alcaraz cannot be overtaken for the No. 2 position through the conclusion of the clay swing. Alexander Zverev, the current No. 3 with 5,255 points, can come closest but would still fall short. If Zverev were to win back-to-back Masters 1000 titles in Madrid and Rome, capture the ATP 500 event in Hamburg the week after (where he is entered) and claim his first Grand Slam at Roland Garros, he would finish the clay-court season with 8,955 points. That projection already factors in the points he is defending during this stretch, including quarterfinal results at Rome and Roland Garros from last year.
At the top of the rankings, Jannik Sinner is assured of retaining No. 1 and has the potential to extend his advantage. Sitting on 13,350 points, Sinner could end the clay-court season anywhere between 11,500 and 15,400 points depending on his results. To land at the lower bound of that range he would need to lose his next match in Madrid and not play Rome or Roland Garros. To reach the upper bound he would need to win Madrid, Rome and Roland Garros.
Alcaraz’s absence reshuffles the mathematical possibilities on clay but does not change the order at the summit of the rankings through the clay-court season. The scenarios leave room for movement below the top two, but the No. 1 and No. 2 positions are locked for the remainder of the clay swing.
ATP Challenger 175 Challenger Tour
From Challengers to the Top: Early Tour Wins That Shaped Today’s Stars
Challenger victories that launched careers: Alcaraz, Sinner, Bublik, Mensik and Tsitsipas. Exclusive
The ATP Challenger circuit remains the proving ground for players who later dominate the main tour. Recent interviews with leading names underline how first Challenger titles provided a foundation of confidence and match experience long before Grand Slam or Masters glory.
Over the past few months, we caught up with some of the most celebrated Champions in men’s tennis and spoke to them about their very first triumphs on the Challenger circuit. For many, that initial title was a defining professional milestone.
Carlos Alcaraz reflected on the pathway explicitly. “It is a step you’ve got to make if you want to get through to the ATP Tour,” Alcaraz tells us. His first Challenger title came in Trieste, Italy in August 2020, a win that preceded his rise to the highest levels of the sport.
Alexander Bublik stressed the extra pressure younger players face. “Pressure will be more than usual on the Challenger Tour, and that’s where a lot of young players break,” says Bublik. His own first Challenger crown was in Morelos, Mexico in February 2017.
Jannik Sinner recalled the immediate lessons of competing above his usual level. “I arrived the night before and I played against a Top 500 player. And I [had] never won against a Top 500 player,” says the now-world No. 1. Sinner took his first Challenger title in Bergamo, Italy in February 2019.
Other recent winners described local significance and survival skills. “We don’t have any ATP Tour events in the Czech republic, so it was the highest tournament category I could win in my home country,” explains Mensik after his Prague triumph in May 2023. “These matches taught me how to survive,” says Tsitsipas, recalling his Genova title from September 2017.
This series highlights how Challenger victories act as both confidence builders and classroom matches. Grigor Dimitrov and Stan Wawrinka are wild-card entrants in this week’s loaded Challenger 175 in Aix-en-Provence, France. Expect further profiles that trace the early titles behind today’s top performers and attention on this week’s Challenger events in Aix-en-Provence and Cagliari.
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