Cincinnati Open Masters WTA
Clara Tauson, FOMO and a Relentless Summer: Navigating Back-to-Back Weeks in Cincinnati
Tauson endures tight post-Wimbledon stretch: back-to-back weeks, doubles duty and limited practice..

CINCINNATI, Ohio — Clara Tauson arrived in Cincinnati having barely paused. After taking four days off following Wimbledon, the world No. 15 played through the three-week US Open swing and flew from the Omnium Banque Nationale to the Cincinnati Open with less than 48 hours between landing and her first match.
The Danish 22-year-old, coming off a semifinal run in Montréal — her second WTA 1000 semifinal of the season — described a compressed schedule that left little room for preparation. “I didn’t really have any turnaround, to be honest,” she said. “I had a one-hour hit on Friday and then I was playing doubles first match on Saturday. I wasn’t too happy about that, but nothing I could do, apparently.”
Tauson accepted a private jet offered after the singles final, a choice she called a mixed result. “It took a really long time,” she said after a three-set singles victory over Ajla Tomljanovic on Sunday. “We landed here, like, 3AM, and I was on the practice court in the afternoon and then playing doubles was obviously hard. I made the most of it.
“I’m practicing a little bit less, obviously, because I’ve had so many matches in a row. I’m still in it in doubles [with Magda Linette] here, also. We won our first match, so I don’t really have too much down time, to be honest! Hopefully, a day off tomorrow and just a light hit. Then we’ll see for the next day.”
The Dubai Duty Free Tennis Championships runner-up prefers match play to practice, even as the schedule strains recovery. “It’s obviously been a really long year, and there’s a really long time left,” she smiled. “I always find peace in knowing there’s a tournament every single week, so if I don’t do well this week, I have another week next week and the week after. I can’t really complain about my situation right now.”
Asked what she would change, Tauson was blunt about needing a proper summer break. “I would love, say, one or two weeks where there’s no tournaments, and there’s nothing to look at or be annoyed by that you’re not playing. Then, obviously, the pre-season could be a little bit longer. But that’s my take on it. It’s obviously a lot when you can see other people playing and maybe you took the week off, and you feel left out.”
She admitted it is hard to unplug. “You see it everywhere: social media, Resultina, all the apps,” said Tauson. “So, you can’t really log out completely. I try to not look as much, but it’s really difficult. “Maybe I’m looking a little bit less at the lower tournaments, but most of the time, I know what’s going on, even in the juniors!” she added with a laugh. Tauson will next face Veronika Kudermetova in the third round.
ATP Cincinnati Open Masters
Cincinnati Rematch: Tiafoe vs. Rune
Tiafoe faces Rune in Cincinnati, live on TennisChannel.com; start 11:00 a.m. ET, Aug 13. Watch live.

Frances Tiafoe and Holger Rune meet again in Cincinnati with live coverage available on TennisChannel.com. The match is scheduled to start at 11:00 a.m. ET on Wednesday, August 13. This pair’s return to the same venue produces immediate storylines because of what happened here a year ago.
Tiafoe arrives as the No. 14-ranked American; Rune is No. 9. Their meeting in Cincinnati is the first match-up in this men’s tournament between Top 15 players. Last year the two played in the semifinals at this event, a match Tiafoe won 4-6, 6-1, 7-6 (4). The result nearly went the other way: Rune led 5-2 in the third set and “had held double match point a few games later with Tiafoe serving at 4-5, 15-40.” That recovery remains a defining moment for Tiafoe at this event.
Tiafoe’s history at this time of year underlines his form here. He reached the biggest final of his career at this tournament a year ago and has also reached both of his career Grand Slam semifinals at the US Open, in 2022 and 2024. Rune comes in with the higher ranking and the memory of coming close to knocking Tiafoe out last year.
The match carries implications for both players in Cincinnati. For Tiafoe, a win would move him another step toward repeating last year’s deep run. For Rune, it is a chance to avenge a narrow loss in identical surroundings.
ATP Cincinnati Open Masters
Cincinnati Fourth Round: Alcaraz Looks for 51st Win Against Lucky Loser Luca Nardi
Alcaraz seeks 51st win of 2025 in Cincinnati; a 22-year Luca Nardi, a lucky loser, stands in his way.

Carlos Alcaraz returns to court Wednesday night in Cincinnati aiming to extend a remarkable run. Yesterday afternoon, Alcaraz moved past fellow 22-year-old Hamad Medjedovic, 6-4, 6-4, to reach 50 wins for the season and to become the only man to record 50 or more wins in each of the last four years. Tonight he will seek his 51st win of 2025 in a fourth-round meeting with 22-year-old Luca Nardi.
Nardi reached this stage after entering the main draw as a lucky loser and fighting his way into the fourth round. He is best known for stunning then-No. 1 Novak Djokovic at Indian Wells last year and arrives in Cincinnati with momentum and confidence. The Italian pushed Alcaraz to three sets in their only previous meeting, a 6-1, 4-6, 6-3 victory for the Spaniard in Doha earlier this year, showing he can extend rallies and trouble the top players.
The pairing presents a clear contrast: Alcaraz arrives having just reached the 50-win milestone and playing with the consistency that produced that mark across multiple seasons. Nardi has the underdog profile of a lucky loser who has turned opportunity into results, including his signature win at Indian Wells.
The match will be watched closely as Alcaraz attempts to convert recent form into another late-night victory, while Nardi looks to repeat the level that has produced upsets and that pushed their Doha meeting to three sets. The result will shape the bottom half of the draw as the tournament moves deeper into the second week.
Cincinnati Open Masters WTA
Keys vs Rybakina: First Top-10 Meeting Opens Cincinnati
Keys and Rybakina, both Grand Slam champions, meet in the first Top 10 match at Cincinnati. 1:35 ET.

The Cincinnati Open’s early schedule presents a high-stakes encounter: Madison Keys and Elena Rybakina, two Grand Slam champions, will meet in what is the tournament’s first match-up between Top 10 players. The meeting carries immediate implications for momentum heading into the late-summer hard-court swing.
Both players arrive in form. Keys, ranked No. 6, is fresh off a quarterfinal appearance in Montreal. Rybakina, No. 10, has recorded back-to-back semifinal runs in Washington D.C. and Montreal. Those recent results set up a balanced contest between a player riding confidence from a deep run and one showing consistent late-stage results on hard courts.
Their head-to-head history gives Keys a narrow edge. She leads their overall series, 3-2, and defeated Rybakina earlier this year in the fourth round of the Australian Open, 6-3, 1-6, 6-3. That Australian Open victory was part of Keys’s championship run. The American also holds the pair’s previous Cincinnati meeting, a 6-2, 6-4 quarterfinal win in 2022.
On paper the matchup combines power and aggressive baseline play with the ability to produce quick points on serve. Those elements were present in their Australian Open meeting and in their Cincinnati contest three years ago.
Expect the match to attract attention beyond the immediate result. As the first Top 10 showdown at the event, it will provide an early barometer for how both players might navigate the draw. For viewers, the match offers a clear narrative: two major champions, recent form, and a compact head-to-head that tilts slightly toward Keys.
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