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Elena Rybakina Reflects on Defeat and Crowd Challenge in Canadian Open Semi-Final

Elena Rybakina discusses her tight semi-final loss and crowd challenges at the 2025 Canadian Open.

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Elena Rybakina faced a tough loss in a gripping semi-final match at the 2025 Canadian Open, falling 6-1, 5-7, 6-7(4) to 18-year-old Canadian wildcard Victoria Mboko after nearly three hours of play in Montreal. The match was tightly contested, especially in the final set where Rybakina twice served for the match at 5-4 and 6-5, holding a match point at 40-30 in the first of those games.

Rybakina, ranked world No. 12 and the 2022 Wimbledon champion, was seeking her second title of the season following her win at the WTA 500 tournament in Strasbourg. She also holds two WTA 1000 titles won in Indian Wells and Rome in 2023. On her way to the semi-finals in Montreal, she defeated Hailey Baptiste, Jacqueline Cristian, Dayana Yastremska, and Marta Kostyuk.

Despite the loss, Rybakina remained positive about her performance. “Yeah, it was tough match, but overall I think successful week for me. Slowly getting better on the court, so yeah,” she said.

The 26-year-old Kazakh also acknowledged the difficulty posed by the heavy crowd support for Mboko, the home favourite. “Yeah, that wasn’t nice, of course,” Rybakina admitted. “I played in a lot of situations where the crowd was supporting the player, but I would say that here it was pretty tough from very beginning. I already felt it from the first game we played, and especially when it’s in between the serves. It is what it is. This is something I was kind of expecting, and definitely it didn’t depend anyhow on my serve or in the mistakes I did or wrong choices. It was obvious that the crowd is going to cheer for their player.”

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Rybakina has been working with coach Davide Sanguinetti since February 2025. In a recent interview, he outlined an ambitious plan for her career trajectory: “At the moment, I’m a sort of ferryman: I joined her team in February, without any work behind me. She explained to me more or less what she had done, and I asked her for two years of collaboration because I have my own working method: in the first year I would like to maintain the status quo, maybe finish at number 6 in the rankings, and next year I would like to take her to number one in the world: she has all the potential.”

ATP Masters Monte Carlo

How Alcaraz Is Pulling the Tour to the Net

Alcaraz’s play is forcing players to attack the net; Roland Garros numbers validate this shift. 2026

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Carlos Alcaraz has altered the tactical conversation in men’s tennis, forcing peers and younger players to reassess the value of going forward. That influence persisted even after Jannik Sinner, the world No. 1, defeated Alcaraz in Monte Carlo and while Alcaraz is sidelined with a sore wrist that prompted withdrawals from Barcelona and Madrid.

Alcaraz’s game has revived interest in attacking tennis, including serve-and-volley, by showing baseline steadiness alone is no longer enough to unsettle him. The draft of many developing players now follows the 22-year-old, seven-time Grand Slam singles champion as a template. The result is a generation pushing for greater versatility and a higher tolerance for risk.

Sinner acknowledged the pressure Alcaraz creates after a high-profile loss: “I was very predictable on court today,” Sinner said. “He (Alcaraz) changed up the game. . .Now it’s going to be on me if I want to make changes or not. We’re definitely going to work on that.” He added,

“I didn’t make one serve and volley (today). I didn’t use a lot of drop shots. Then you arrive at the point where you have to play Carlos, you have to go out of the comfort zone.”

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Examples of the shift appeared across recent events. Local sensation Valentin Vacherot attacked the net on a pressure point against Alex de Minaur in Monte Carlo and pulled off a deciding volley. Paul Annacone observed, “I’m impressed by his (Vacherot’s) willingness to come forward in moments that are really stressful. He isn’t afraid to push the envelope.” Alexander Zverev has also spoken about playing with more purpose and aggression, and his net forays paid dividends in matches this season.

Historic matches underline the point. Novak Djokovic’s 2023 Cincinnati final with Alcaraz featured a midmatch adjustment to approach the net more often; Djokovic won 14 of 20 points there. Alcaraz, for his part, used serve-and-volley to save match points and posted similar net numbers.

Craig O’Shannessy compiled Roland Garros data that cuts against the notion that net rushers suffer on clay: among 22 men who approached the net 75 times or more through three rounds, net winning percentage was 69 percent versus 65 percent for the rest of the field, while baseline winning percentage across the field was just 47 percent. The message is clear: the net is a weapon again, and the tour is responding.

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ATP Madrid Open Masters

Alcaraz and Djokovic Withdraw From Madrid Open as Both Address Injuries

Carlos Alcaraz and Novak Djokovic will miss the Mutua Madrid Open amid ongoing injury recoveries. .

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Two of the sport’s biggest names will not compete at the Mutua Madrid Open after separate withdrawals citing injury. Carlos Alcaraz and Novak Djokovic announced they will miss the ATP Masters 1000 event in Madrid.

For Alcaraz it is the second consecutive year he will be absent from his home Masters 1000 tournament. The 22-year-old missed the 2025 edition because of a right leg injury and this week confirmed he will also sit out the Spanish event after withdrawing from the Barcelona Open on Wednesday, citing a right wrist injury.

Alcaraz made a strong start to the clay season by reaching the Monte Carlo final last week, where he lost to Jannik Sinner. That defeat cost him the ATP world No. 1 ranking. He then traveled to Barcelona and told press, “This week is one where I should take a break, but Barcelona is a very special place for me.” He withdrew from the event after winning his opening match. He is next scheduled to compete in Rome and at Roland Garros, where he is the defending champion at the French Open.

On social media Alcaraz wrote: “Some news is incredibly hard to share. Madrid is home, one of the most special places on the calendar to me, and that’s why it hurts so much not being able to play here for the second year in a row,” and added, “It especially hurts not to be in front of my people, in a tournament that means so much. Thanks for your love always and I hope to see you all soon.” He also posted: “Madrid, unfortunately I won’t be able to compete @MutuaMadridOpen this year. I’m continuing my recovery in order to be back soon. Hasta pronto!”

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Earlier the same day three-time Madrid champion Novak Djokovic announced he would not play in Madrid, the third time in four years he has missed the event, also absent in 2023 and 2024. “I’m continuing my recovery in order to come back soon,” he wrote. “Hasta pronto! (See you soon!)”

© 2026 Mateo Villalba

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ATP Masters Monte Carlo

Sinner Tops Alcaraz in Monte Carlo; Matt Rife Tries Tennis in Episode 16 of The Big T

Sinner’s Monte Carlo win, a comic’s first tennis lesson with Eubanks, and Code Violations insights..

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Episode 16 of The Big T podcast centers on Jannik Sinner’s win over Carlos Alcaraz in the Monte Carlo final and a crossover segment that pairs comedy with tennis.

Nick Monroe and Brad Gilbert open the episode with a breakdown of the Monte Carlo final (1:30), identifying the decisive moments and tactical adjustments that favored Sinner. Monroe relays insight from Sinner’s coach on the game plan, while Gilbert pinpoints missed opportunities for Alcaraz and outlines adjustments he will need moving forward. “Maybe he has started to figure things out, after two wins in a row…he could get on a streak and win five or six in a row. Brad Gilbert, on Jannik SInner”

The hosts also look ahead to the road to Roland Garros and how both players are managing schedules with a potential rematch in Paris in mind (6:10).

A lighter but thoughtful portion of the episode features stand-up comic Matt Rife alongside Chris Eubanks (14:30). Rife describes his first time on court after being invited to try tennis: “Tennis Channel asked me if I wanted to embarrass myself. They were like, ‘have you ever played before?’ I said, ‘not a day in my life.’ So then they brought in the best.” The segment compares performing solo under pressure to competing on court, traces the grind through smaller stages, and debates the greatest of all time in both fields with names like Eddie Murphy, Dave Chappelle, Roger Federer and Novak Djokovic entering the conversation.

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Rife observes a key technical challenge: “Much like tennis, it’s not something you can learn in a room by yourself. Matt Rife, on the similarities between comedy and tennis” The episode includes a practical lesson, as Eubanks teaches Rife basics and tests him in live points.

Episode 16 closes with the Code Violations segment (48:00), where Monroe, Gilbert and Geoff Chizever discuss the small habits that frustrate professionals, from lateness to messy locker rooms to odd ways of calling the score.

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