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Alizé Cornet confirms second retirement after brief comeback

Alizé Cornet confirms a second, and she hopes permanent, retirement after a brief 2025 comeback. Now.

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Alizé Cornet has announced she is stepping away from professional tennis again, describing this return to retirement as final. The 35-year-old Frenchwoman received a farewell at Roland Garros in 2024 but mounted a short comeback this season that ended after a few events.

On Instagram Cornet posted a photograph from San Sebastian and wrote, “Reflecting on my time in San Sebastian and the end (for real this time) of a chapter as a player,” before adding, “Couldn’t dream of a better place than this beautiful city to definitely turn the page and start writing others, in every sense of the word.” The image captured the spot where she played her final tournament earlier this month.

Her comeback record stood at 4-6, with matches at a WTA 125 event and in main-tour qualifying. At Wimbledon she told the WTA’s Alex Macpherson that returning to play qualifying on grass was a way to “close the loop” on a career that began with a memorable Wimbledon debut as a lucky loser in 2007.

Cornet framed her recent return as a conscious effort to finish on her own terms. “It’s the perfect last chapter,” said Cornet, who’s written three books. “This would be the actual perfect ending. Here.” Those remarks underlined a desire to bring closure to a long professional journey.

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The decision follows a public farewell at Roland Garros in 2024 and the brief competitive stretch this year. Cornet’s statement and the accompanying photograph in San Sebastian mark the conclusion of the chapter she referenced and her intent to move on from life as a touring player.

© 2025 Robert Prange

125 Challenger Tour Oeiras Open

Safiullin Longs Return: Dominant Oeiras Open 125 Victory

Safiullin returned from injury to win the Oeiras Open 125 with a dominant 6-1, 6-2 final showing

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Roman Safiullin closed a stirring comeback at the Oeiras Open 125, capturing the clay-court title with a commanding 6-1, 6-2 win over top seed Valentin Royer. The 226th-ranked qualifier needed only 64 minutes to complete his seventh triumph of the week and underline a decisive return after a six-month injury absence.

A former Top 40 player and ATP finalist in Chengdu 2023, Safiullin had entered Portugal having played just five events this season. At Oeiras he navigated the qualifying rounds and then produced a series of high-quality performances, including saving a match point against Jaime Faria in the quarterfinals and defeating Henrique Rocha in the semifinals.

In the final he dictated play, hitting 21 winners to Royer’s 12, committing fewer unforced errors and not facing a single break point. The result adds a seventh Challenger title to Safiullin’s record, keeping his perfect record in finals intact at this level. It is his second title at the 125 tier and his first at that level on clay.

“It was one of those matches where everything works,” Safiullin said. “You feel amazing, and nothing your opponent does can really hurt you. It’s rare, but every player experiences it at some point. To have it happen in a final is a bonus.”

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The Oeiras triumph delivers 125 ATP ranking points and €30,460 in prize money, and it secures Safiullin a place in the qualifying draws for Roland Garros and Wimbledon after the climb in the rankings that followed his run.

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125 500 Charleston Open

Donna Vekic retools on green clay in Charleston as she aims to climb back into Top 100

Donna Vekic returned to Charleston, beating Ajla Tomljanovic while plotting a return to the Top 100

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Donna Vekic used a return to Charleston to arrest a slide in form and to reset ahead of the clay season. After an apparel switch to Ellesse and the tour’s marketing photoshoot at Indian Wells, the former Wimbledon semifinalist edged Ajla Tomljanovic, 3-6, 6-1, 6-4, in a match that stretched the Croat’s patience and resolve.

The victory followed a mixed start to 2026 that has seen Vekic slip from a career-high of No. 17 to No. 79 at the end of last year and fall out of the Top 100 for the first time since 2022. She defended her level while diagnosing the fine margins where matches have turned away from her.

“I’ve definitely had a good level of tennis from the beginning of the year,” Vekic said. “I lost the first round to Alex [Eala] in Auckland and then I lost to Mirra [Andreeva] in Australia. Those two were really tough matches but I played really well. I made the finals [at a WTA 125k] in Manila, too, so I’m playing really good tennis. I just need to believe in myself a bit more in these tough situations in matches.”

Her approach has been pragmatic. After missing the Miami Open main draw she stayed in North America, working in a Boca Raton practice block and accepting support from former coach Pam Shriver through Yonex’s Mindset and Performance Program. Training included practice sets with Tomljanovic and off-court breaks such as horseback riding in Wellington.

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“It’s always challenging, it’s always tough,” she said of her latest comeback. “I’m definitely more towards the end of my career. The way I look at it is just to give it my best. If it works out, great. If it doesn’t, I’ve had a pretty good career with a lot to be proud of.”

Vekic acknowledged the need for freer tennis and less tension in big moments. She celebrated meeting a friend in a first-round draw with a simple dinner on Daniel Island and then converted that momentum into her first green-clay win since 2015, joking about the surface: “It’s faster than the red clay, and it’s green. So, I try to imagine it’s a grass court!”

“I’m trying to play a little bit more freely. Sometimes when you want it so bad, you have the opposite effect. You get tighter, more nervous. So, I’m just trying to relax a bit. Donna Vekic

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125 Challenger Tour Guerri Napoli Tennis Cup

Gojo wins Morelia Open; Medjedovic claims Napoli crown and returns to Top 100

Gojo wins Morelia Open; Medjedovic claims Guerri Napoli title and returns to ATP Top 100. Read more.

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Borna Gojo lifted the biggest title of his career at the Morelia Open, adding a second triumph in Mexico during a strong 2026 run. The eighth seed defeated Juan Pablo Ficovich 7-6(5), 6-2 in the final at Estadio Tres Marías in one hour and 32 minutes. The opening set was decided in a tight tie-break and Gojo used that momentum to break serve at key moments in the second set and close the match convincingly.

The 28-year-old Split native reflected on the physical and mental demands of the final. “It was a very difficult match. Juan is a great opponent, but today the weather was a challenge for both of us, and in the end, I managed to close it out with my serve. This victory means a lot to me. The past two years have been very difficult after a back injury, but today I’ve won the biggest title of my career and I’m very grateful to Morelia and Mexico for the past few weeks,” he said.

Gojo’s Morelia title is his second in Mexico this season, following the Challenger in Metepec in February. All four of his ATP Challenger titles have come on fast surfaces, including Ortisei in 2022 and Sioux Falls in 2024. He dropped just one set in Morelia, to Quinn Vandecasteele in the second round. The 125 ranking points from the victory lift him 12 places from No. 151 to No. 139.

On clay in Naples, fifth-seeded Hamad Medjedovic won the Guerri Napoli Tennis Cup, beating Daniel Altmaier 6-2, 6-4 in one hour and 37 minutes. Medjedovic, a 22-year-old Serbian long regarded as a protégé of Novak Djokovic, controlled the final against the top seed and world No. 55 and drew repeated applause from a sold-out Centre Court. He recovered from early struggles against Hynek Barton and Stefanos Sakellaridis before beating Alexandre Muller in the quarterfinals and Vitaliy Sachko in the semifinals.

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“It has been an amazing week. I am really happy to win this tournament,” Medjedovic said. “It’s the first clay-court tournament of the season and I came here without high expectations. But with the support from an amazing crowd, I managed to play a great level of tennis. I was a bit sick at the beginning of the week but was able to increase my level every round and eventually win the trophy.” The 125 points move him from No. 115 to No. 81; Altmaier rises to No. 52.

The Guerri Napoli Tennis Cup finished with record-breaking attendance and participation, surpassing 2025 figures. “The organizational and public success of the Guerri Napoli Tennis Cup has been exciting,” said Antonio Santa Maria, General Manager of organizer Master Group Sport. “The setting of the Tennis Club Napoli is unique in the world, but that alone is not enough; it requires efficient organization in every aspect. We paid attention to every detail in terms of services for players and fans to maintain a high level for the event. ]”

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