250 ATP Laver Cup
Alcaraz and Ruud spark Europe’s bid with opening doubles victory at Laver Cup
Alcaraz and Ruud opened Day 3 with a doubles win, aiming to mirror last year’s Laver Cup comeback..
Team Europe began Day 3 with the exact kind of momentum it needs to chase a repeat of last year’s turnaround. After entering the final day of the 2024 Laver Cup trailing Team World 8-4 and later completing a 13-11 comeback with back-to-back singles wins from Carlos Alcaraz and Alexander Zverev, Europe again opened with a doubles victory on Sunday.
Down 9-3 when play resumed, Carlos Alcaraz and Casper Ruud beat Team World’s Alex Michelsen and Reilly Opelka, 7-6 (4), 6-1. The match echoed the first step of the previous comeback, a fast start that shifted pressure back onto Team World.
“Don’t jinx anything here,” Ruud said when reminded of last year. “But let’s try. Obviously, that’s the goal and the plan, but Team World has their plan, so let’s see how it goes from here. But a great start for Team Europe.
“We fired each other up after a tough yesterday and night. I think we showed great grit and got the first match done. Let’s see if we can bring the fight from here.”
Michelsen and Opelka looked poised in the opening set, moving ahead in the tiebreak and briefly leading 4-1. The tide turned when Alcaraz and Ruud surged through the tiebreak and then dominated the second set, running to a 5-0 lead early before closing out the match.
“A tiebreak can change in just one point,” said a smiling Alcaraz on court after the match, “so we stayed there and tried to put as many returns in as we could and played the rallies. I think we stayed really strong and really solid, feeling really clear about what we had to do. It went pretty well.”
Team Europe had suffered a difficult Day 2, dropping all four matches on Saturday and arriving at the final day in a near must-win position. The doubles win offered a tangible first step toward reversing that deficit.
250 Hobart International Player News
Maria tops Williams in Hobart as oldest combined-age WTA match makes history
Tatjana Maria defeated Venus Williams 6-4, 6-3 in Hobart, the oldest combined-age WTA match. 2026 win
Tatjana Maria defeated Venus Williams 6-4, 6-3 in the first round of the Hobart International, registering a straight-sets win in the first career meeting between the two veterans. The 38-year-old mother of two closed out the match after breaking serve five times in just under an hour-and-a-half on court.
Their combined age exceeded 84 years, making it the oldest match on the WTA tour since the tour began in 1973. The result followed Maria’s loss the previous week in the first round of the Brisbane International to 17-year-old Aussie Emerson Jones.
“Everybody loves Venus—I love her too!” the German said, noting a local connection: Maria makes her family home near Williams in Florida. She also described her children’s excitement about the matchup. Maria said her two daughters, 12-year-old Charlotte and 4-year-old Cecilia, count Williams among their favorite players.
“They said they are for me! But Charlotte’s reaction was, ‘Oh my God, that’s amazing. I’m going to see Venus against you?’,” Maria said. “For me, to play her was such an honor because I never played her before. It was not easy with all the wind but it was amazing.”
For Williams, the loss extended a difficult run in main-draw singles. Since becoming the second-oldest winner of a WTA main-draw singles match in the Open Era last summer in Washington, D.C., former world No. 1 Williams has lost five straight singles matches. The Hobart meeting paired two experienced players and produced a clear, straight-sets outcome as the early-season events continue to unfold.
250 ASB Classic Australian Open
Svitolina Claims 19th WTA Title in Auckland, Beats Wang Xinyu 6-3, 7-6 (8)
Svitolina won her 19th WTA title in Auckland, defeating Wang Xinyu 6-3, 7-6 (8) and opens 5-0 so far
Top-seeded Elina Svitolina captured her 19th WTA Tour title Sunday at the ASB Classic, defeating seventh-seeded Wang Xinyu 6-3, 7-6 (8). The 13th-ranked Svitolina improved to 5-0 to open the year after ending 2025 on a four-match losing streak and now owns 19 titles from 24 finals appearances.
This was Svitolina’s first tournament since she took a mental health break that ended her 2025 season in September. She was supported courtside throughout the week by her husband Gael Monfils, who won the men’s title in Auckland last year and will defend that title from Monday.
“It definitely feels amazing to win another title, especially after a not very pleasant end of year for me,” Svitolina said. “But that break really helped me to regroup and come back with a new energy and I’m very happy that I got a title here.
“This one was very special because, obviously, my husband won here last year and this year he told me if you don’t win this year I don’t know what to tell you anymore.”
Svitolina showed resilience from the start, saving a break point in her opening service game. Wang, in her first WTA Tour final, displayed sharp net play and a well-disguised drop shot, weapons notable from her French Open doubles success.
Svitolina converted her first break opportunity in the sixth game and closed out the opening set in just over 30 minutes. In the second set, Wang held a tight opening game and used a drop shot to force Svitolina out of position, then survived break points in the fifth with a running volley and pushed to lead 5-4.
The match reached a tiebreak where Wang took an early advantage, but Svitolina quickly recovered. She produced two powerful serves to move ahead 6-5, survived a saved championship point and then seized a crucial minibreak before serving out the victory on her second match point.
Svitolina now heads to Melbourne, where she will play an exhibition against fourth-ranked Amanda Anisimova on Wednesday.
250 ATP United Cup
Poland ends runner-up run, defeats Switzerland in United Cup final
Poland defeated Switzerland 2-1 in the United Cup final as Kawa and Zielinski won mixed doubles. Sun
After finishing second in the United Cup the past two seasons, Poland completed a run to the title with a narrow 2-1 victory over Switzerland. The tie was decided in mixed doubles when Katarzyna Kawa and Jan Zielinski beat Belinda Bencic and Jakub Paul 6-4, 6-3 to secure the win for Poland.
The weekend had produced tense two-set reversals and three-set singles battles. Belinda Bencic rallied from a set down to upset Iga Swiatek 3-6, 6-0, 6-3. Hubert Hurkacz then forced the deciding doubles by defeating Stan Wawrinka 6-3, 3-6, 6-3.
Poland had fallen short in the final in each of the two previous editions, losing to Germany in the 2024 final and to the United States last year. This time the country got over the line thanks to the breakthrough mixed doubles pairing of Kawa and Zielinski, whose straight-sets victory clinched the tie.
Bencic earned tournament MVP honors after compiling a 9-1 record over the event. She described the award as “bittersweet.” The Swiss player’s comeback over Swiatek and consistent performances through the week were central to Switzerland’s challenge in the final.
The match sequence underlined how small margins decided the title. Singles victories by Bencic and Hurkacz set up a decisive doubles match that ultimately swung Poland’s way. Kawa and Zielinski delivered under pressure, converting the opportunity to lift the trophy for their nation after two successive runner-up finishes.
© 2026 Robert Prange
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