Connect with us

ATP Masters Monte Carlo

Sinner Wins Monte Carlo Final Over Alcaraz in Windy, Tactical Duel

Sinner secured his first top-level clay title in Monte Carlo, beat Carlos Alcaraz in a windy final.

Published

on

Jannik Sinner found his serve and forehand just when it mattered and in doing so claimed his first big clay title, beating Carlos Alcaraz in a wind-affected final at Monte Carlo.

“I’m happy to win at least one big trophy on this surface,” Sinner said after 5 on Sunday. “I haven’t done it before, so it means a lot to me.” The victory was notable because, despite Sinner’s sustained success — including 66 weeks at No. 1, four majors and seven Masters 1000s — he previously had only one clay-court title, a 250 in Umag four years ago.

Monte Carlo is Sinner’s adopted hometown and a tournament he could not enter a year ago because of a doping suspension. That suspension contributed to his drop to No. 2 behind Alcaraz. This win restores him to the top and marks a first conquest on his rival’s preferred surface.

The match was shaped as much by gusts as by groundstrokes. “Today’s wind was a little bit tricky because it wasn’t in just one direction,” Alcaraz said. “It was twirling around. One point you play a point with the wind helping and the next point it was totally opposite.” One line in the coverage summarized the day: One point you play a point with the wind helping and the next point it was totally opposite. – Carlos Alcaraz

Advertisement

Serve percentages suffered: Alcaraz made 58 percent of first serves and Sinner 51. Winners and errors tilted the raw numbers toward Alcaraz, 20 winners to 48 errors, while Sinner had 13 winners and 38 errors. Still, Sinner’s serve was decisive in the first-set tiebreak, where he made all six of his first serves and won three points outright on those deliveries. A pair of late nerves swung the breaker, with Sinner miscuing a forehand at 6-4 and Alcaraz double-faulting at 5-6.

Sinner’s forehand produced the critical reversals in the second set. Down a break at 1-3, he thumped a 107-m.p.h. forehand winner, then recovered to break back and take control.

“I felt close on the return games,” Sinner said. “I had a feeling that the new ball helped me. The ball change was at 2-1. I just tried to stay there mentally, to keep pushing. I felt a bit tired, so I needed to keep up with the right mentality.”

Alcaraz reflected on missed chances. “I would say that the important moments, the important points, I didn’t play well,” he said. “I had so many opportunities in the match that I didn’t take it. I think the first tiebreak, I didn’t play well and I think he just played unbelievable tennis when it mattered. I think that was the key today.”

Advertisement

Sinner noted the week’s purpose and the conditions. “We came here trying to get as many matches as possible, getting good feedback before other big tournaments coming up,” he said. “Today was a high level from both of us. It was a bit windy, a bit breezy. Different conditions from what the tournament has brought. The result is amazing.”

ATP French Open Grand Slam

Tiafoe turns a disputed line call into momentum for five-set recovery at Roland Garros

Tiafoe used a row over a line call to ignite a comeback, winning in five sets at Roland Garros. 2026

Published

on

Frances Tiafoe needed late drama to complete a second consecutive five-set match at Roland Garros, turning a heated exchange over a line call into the spark that propelled him to a four-hour victory over Portugal’s Jaime Faria. The No. 19 seed has now played 14 sets across three rounds and logged nearly 12 hours on court this fortnight.

The flash point arrived early in the fifth set with Tiafoe leading 2-1. At 15-15 on Faria’s serve, a serve down the T that appeared to clip the line prompted Tiafoe to ask chair umpire Marijana Veljovic to inspect the mark. Veljovic agreed the ball touched the line, a decision that unofficial Hawk-Eye replays on television confirmed, and the point was awarded to Faria.

Faria reacted angrily to Tiafoe’s challenge of the call and to how it was made. On-court microphones picked up Tiafoe addressing his opponent: “Don’t act like you’re tough,” and “You’re not hard, bro. Just play.” As the two approached the net, Faria said to Veljovic, “You see what he’s saying?” Veljovic stepped down from the chair and into the space between the players, saying, “This has to stop, all of this,” and reminding both to quiet down before play resumed.

Faria returned moments later to press Veljovic for a warning to Tiafoe, but the umpire declined.

Advertisement

Tiafoe would recover from two sets down and a break in the third, when Faria had a game point for a 5-3 lead, to prevail 4-6, 6-7(2), 7-6 (4), 6-1, 6-2. Reflecting on the turning point, Tiafoe said, “I needed that, because I’m up at the time, but I’m still a little nervous,” he said. “And he was chirping. He definitely gave me a lot of lip. He thought he was [boxer] Ryan Garcia or something.”

© 2026 Getty Images

Continue Reading

ATP French Open Grand Slam

Berrettini endures five-hour classic to reach Roland Garros last 16

Berrettini survived a five-hour battle at Roland Garros, beating Comesama in five sets. A heroic win

Published

on

Matteo Berrettini emerged from a marathon encounter at Roland Garros, outlasting Francisco Comesama in a five-set battle that stretched just over five hours. The score read 7-6 (3), 5-7, 6-7 (4), 6-4, 7-6 (13) after 389 points of tension on Court Simonne-Mathieu.

Berrettini found himself on the brink more than once, including a match point against him late in the decisive breaker. He had rallied from a two-sets-to-one deficit and navigated a 10-point final-set tiebreaker, reaching match point four times before finally closing it out. At one crucial moment Comesama ran around to hit a forehand and sent it long, then later missed again at 14-13, handing Berrettini the opportunity he needed.

“I was just telling myself I deserve to be here.”

Statistically the match was brutal and brilliant in equal measure. They combined for 40 aces, and Berrettini produced 70 winners against 80 unforced errors. Across the 5 hours and 13 minutes, his average first-serve speed was recorded at 126 m.p.h.

Advertisement

“Francisco played an unbelievable match, he missed like two balls in five hours.”

Berrettini, now 30 and ranked 105th, has a clear narrative of interrupted potential. After a quarterfinal run at Roland Garros in 2021 he missed the clay major four straight times because of a string of injuries to his ab, ankle, hand and foot. This win, and the return to form it signals, will push him well back inside the Top 100.

“I’m really proud of the work that I’ve done to come back and to feel good again. Matteo Berrettini”

After the match he credited the crowd and his team for getting him through.

Advertisement

“I’m just so happy, so tired,” he said. “Grateful for this incredible team, this unbelievable crowd, under the heat, under the sun, two sets to one down, we fought through this match, guys.”

With the exit of his countryman Jannik Sinner, Berrettini arrives in the second week with renewed health and a realistic chance to advance deep at the Grand Slam.

Continue Reading

ATP French Open Grand Slam

Svajda advances to Roland Garros second week with five-set win on his father’s birthday

Svajda reached second week at Roland Garros, beating Cerundolo in five sets on his father’s birthday

Published

on

Zachary Svajda became the first American man to reach the second week at this year’s Roland Garros after a draining five-set victory over Francisco Cerundolo. Svajda, who arrived in Paris with one clay win this season, moved past Cerundolo 6-3, 6-4, 3-6, 4-6, 6-3 following a pair of earlier four-set wins.

“I’m definitely shocked, surprised for sure. It hasn’t kicked in yet,” the world No. 85 told press afterwards. He reflected on his unexpected form on clay and on the meaning of the day: “I knew I would get good on the clay. I thought maybe in a few years, but I never expected right now. I’m very grateful and blessed and just taking it all in.”

Svajda said fatigue crept in after the two-set lead as Cerundolo raised his level, prompting shorter points and a tense finish. He also credited an emotional lift tied to the calendar: “It’s like I’m dreaming right now, in a dream. It’s crazy. Today was so special, too, because it’s also my dad’s birthday.”

The San Diego, Calif. native came into the tournament with a 3-7 start to the season in tour-level matches. His run in Paris will push him past his previous career-high ranking of No. 82 regardless of the outcome in his next match against Flavio Cobolli.

Advertisement

After the win several peers approached Svajda, including Frances Tiafoe. “He was super happy for me. He gave me a big hug. He was just talking how good I’m playing,” Svajda recalled. “He was shocked too. ‘Like, Dude, this is clay court, what’s going on?’ I’m, like, ‘Dude, I have no idea what’s going on.’ He’s a great guy. It was funny.”

Svajda leaves Paris with his best major result to date and a dramatic five-set triumph that doubled as a personal milestone.

Continue Reading

Trending