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ATP Cincinnati Open Masters

Sinner halts Atmane in Cincinnati, notches 200th hard-court victory

Sinner ended Terence Atmane’s run in Cincinnati and recorded the 200th hard-court win of his career.

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Jannik Sinner ended Terence Atmane’s surprise run at the Cincinnati Open and reached another career milestone on Saturday. The world No. 1, celebrating his 24th birthday, edged the French qualifier in a tight opening set before closing out a 7-6 (4), 6-2 victory.

Atmane, ranked No. 136, arrived in Cincinnati with momentum. The qualifier reached his first ATP semifinal and did so at a Masters 1000 event, recording the first two Top 10 wins of his career along the way against No. 4 Taylor Fritz and No. 9 Holger Rune. Sinner proved too steady in the semifinal, however, and denied Atmane a deeper run.

The win carried additional significance for Sinner: it was the 200th hard-court victory of his tour-level career. He became the first man born in the 2000s to reach 200 wins on hard courts. The result also extended Sinner’s recent dominance on the surface; he has now won his last 26 matches in a row on hard courts.

With the victory, Sinner moved one win away from claiming his first Masters 1000 title of the year and the fifth Masters 1000 crown of his career. The scoreboard lines and recent form underline how the world No. 1 has combined consistency and big-match execution in this stretch of the season.

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Atmane’s week in Cincinnati marked a clear breakthrough: a maiden Masters 1000 semifinal, a first trip to an ATP semifinal and two Top 10 scalps. Sinner’s win stopped that run but also underscored the milestones the young world No. 1 continues to accumulate as he advances toward the title match.

ATP Grand Slam US Open

Sinner Surge: Straight-sets Win Sends World No. 1 into Fifth Consecutive Major Semifinal

Jannik Sinner reached his fifth straight Grand Slam semifinal after a 6-1, 6-4, 6-2 win over Musetti

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Jannik Sinner advanced to the US Open semifinals with a commanding 6-1, 6-4, 6-2 victory over compatriot Lorenzo Musetti in the first all-Italian quarterfinal at a men’s major. The top seed closed the match in two hours, with the opening set lasting only 27 minutes, and conceded just 38 games across his five matches to this point.

Sinner defended his title with relative ease through the quarterfinal, handling all seven break points he faced and preserving a streak that now stands at 26 consecutive major match wins on hard courts. That run includes his two Australian Open titles this year and his triumph in New York a year ago.

By reaching the last four, Sinner notched his fifth straight Grand Slam semifinal. A win in the semifinal would complete a run to the final at all four majors this season.

On Friday, Sinner will meet No. 25 seed Felix Auger-Aliassime, who reached the semifinals by defeating No. 8 Alex de Minaur 4-6, 7-6 (7), 7-5, 7-6 (4). Auger-Aliassime’s four-set victory sets up a high-stakes matchup between the top seed and the 25th seed as Sinner attempts to maintain his title defense.

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Sinner’s efficiency through the early rounds has been notable; he has dropped only 38 games in five matches, the second-fewest by a man to reach the US Open semifinals since 2020. His combination of fast starts and resilience on return games underpinned a straight-sets finish over Musetti and reinforced his position at the top of the draw as the tournament progresses.

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Analytics & Stats ATP US Open

Djokovic’s path to a fifth US Open and a place with three all-time greats

Djokovic targets a fifth US Open crown to join Federer, Connors and Sampras with five titles in 2025

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Novak Djokovic, 38, remains a defining presence at the 2025 US Open. The Serbian arrives in New York on the back of semi-final runs at the Australian Open, French Open and Wimbledon earlier in 2025, and progressed to a record 14th US Open semi-final after Tuesday’s quarter-final. He extended his head-to-head dominance over 2024 runner-up Taylor Fritz to 11 wins from 11 in that match.

Djokovic already sits on 24 Grand Slam singles titles and has a long list of major records, yet a fifth US Open crown would place him in a select group. Since 1968, three men have claimed five US Open titles in the Open Era: Roger Federer, Jimmy Connors and Pete Sampras. Connors won in 1974, 1976, 1978, 1982 and 1983. Sampras lifted his first US Open in 1990 and added titles in 1993, 1995, 1996 and 2002. Federer collected five consecutive trophies from 2004 to 2008 and remains the last man to successfully defend the title.

While Federer and Connors reached seven US Open finals between them, that particular finals record belongs to Djokovic, who has appeared in 10 finals in New York. He won the tournament in 2011, 2015, 2018 and 2023, giving him four US Open titles and placing him joint-fourth on the all-time list alongside Rafael Nadal and John McEnroe.

Djokovic has also lost six US Open finals: to Federer in 2007, to Nadal in 2010, to Andy Murray in 2012, to Nadal again in 2013, to Stan Wawrinka in 2016 and to Daniil Medvedev in 2021. A victory in New York would have drawn him level with Federer, Sampras and Connors at five US Open titles.

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Beyond the tournament-specific milestone, Djokovic’s broader aims remain prominent: a 25th major and the possibility of becoming the oldest men’s singles Grand Slam winner of the Open Era. Should he defeat Carlos Alcaraz in Friday’s semi-final and then lift the trophy, it would add another defining chapter to his career.

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ATP Grand Slam US Open

Auger-Aliassime Up 14 Places After Four-Set US Open Quarter-final Battle

Auger-Aliassime reached the US Open semi-finals, provisionally jumping 14 places to world No 13. Now

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Felix Auger-Aliassime will move back inside the top 15 of the ATP Rankings after a hard-fought four-set win over Alex de Minaur in the US Open quarter-final.

The world No 27 and 25th seed edged de Minaur 4-6, 7-6(7), 7-5, 7-6(4) in a match that lasted four hours and 10 minutes on Arthur Ashe Stadium. It was a return to the New York semi-finals for Auger-Aliassime for the first time since 2021 and his first Grand Slam quarter-final since the 2022 Australian Open.

Neither player was at his best for long stretches, but Auger-Aliassime — who had already defeated third seed Alexander Zverev and 15th seed Andrey Rublev at this tournament — found the decisive edge in key moments. He saved a set point in the second-set tiebreak to avoid falling two sets to love down. After de Minaur failed to serve out the fourth set, Auger-Aliassime prevailed in a tense fourth-set tiebreak.

“It feels amazing — honestly, four years ago, it feels like more,” reflected the Canadian on his return to the semi-final.

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“It was a tough couple of years, but it feels even better now to be back in the semi-finals. It’s been an amazing tournament so far.

“It’s not over, there’s still some tennis to play, and the biggest challenges are yet to come, but that’s what I live for, that’s what I train for — so I’m going to show up and be ready for my [semi-final] match on Friday.”

For Alex de Minaur, now world No 8, the loss continues a frustrating Grand Slam record — he has lost all five major quarter-finals he has contested and withdrew from his last-eight match at Wimbledon last summer.

Auger-Aliassime’s run has seen him beat three top-15 opponents in succession. In the ATP Live Rankings he is provisionally up 14 places to world No 13, holding 2,755 points. The 25-year-old reached a career-high of world No 6 at the end of 2022 and finished both 2023 and 2024 at No 29. His current form puts him well placed to finish the year inside the top 15 and potentially target a return to the top 10. A semi-final victory would provisionally move him to 11th, though he would likely face world No 1 Jannik Sinner at that stage.

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