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ATP Challenger Tour MarketBeat Open

Academic discipline and serving progress propel Michael Zheng’s Challenger surge

Michael Zheng balances Ivy League life and academics while riding a 15-match Challenger streak. Now.

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Michael Zheng has turned a deliberate college path into momentum on the ATP Challenger Tour. The first-generation American and reigning NCAA champion has compiled a 15-match winning streak on the Challenger circuit, adding titles at Chicago in August and subsequent hard-court crowns in Columbus and Tiburon after winning a round of qualifying at the US Open.

Zheng reviews the choice to stay in school plainly: “I felt like I just wasn’t ready,” he tells TENNIS.com when reflecting on his decision not to turn pro at 18 and instead pursue an NCAA pathway at Columbia University. The 21-year-old credits steady technical gains and confidence for his run: “I feel like my serve has gotten a lot better, so I’m getting a few more free points. I think just a little bit of everything has been kind of clicking and just playing with confidence. It’s been working,” he says. “Every week is a little bit different. I think that was something I struggled with before the last couple of years, but I’ve been doing a better job with that.”

Columbia coach Howard “Howie” Endelman sees the institutional fit as central to Zheng’s growth. “I just think that he’s really embraced the opportunity to be a college tennis player and to work on his game. At the same time, he’s also furthering his academic career, and meeting new people, and kind of using tennis as a vehicle to create opportunities in all parts of his life,” believes Endelman. He has praised Zheng’s defense, hands and developing serve and forehand: “He’s always been really tough from the ground, with terrific defense and excellent hands. I think tennis-wise, his serve has improved tremendously. His forehand has become a terrific weapon. His backhand has gotten better. He’s coming forward.”

Zheng’s background is part of the story. The son of immigrants from the Hubei area of China, he was born in Chesapeake, Va., raised in Montville, N.J., and first picked up a racket at six. A psychology major on track to graduate next spring, he also plays poker recreationally: “I think it’s a fun game, just training the mental side,” he says.

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Beginning 2025 outside the ATP Top 750, Zheng is now ranked No. 181 and enters the MarketBeat Open in Sioux Falls as the No. 7 seed. Reflecting on the rapid rise, he admitted, “I would say I was surprised, for sure, that it happened so fast. I knew the level was there, but at the same time, I feel like at these events, all the players are so good,” he says of the competition. “I think one of the biggest takeaways is just the physicality. A lot of people don’t really see the week in, week out grind. A lot of these players are doing three, four, five, six weeks in a row on the road. You have to be there physically and mentally.”

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Ben Shelton Wins BMW Open and Signals Big Clay Ambitions

Shelton won the 2026 BMW Open, earning €478,935, a BMW iX3, Lederhosen and 500 ATP points. Since 2002

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Ben Shelton captured the 2026 BMW Open by Bitpanda, defeating fourth-seeded Flavio Cobolli 6-2, 7-5 in Sunday’s singles final. Playing before packed stands on Center Court at the MTTC Iphitos, Shelton jumped to a 4-0 lead in the opening set and never surrendered his composure.

Cobolli raised his level as the match progressed, but the world No. 6 stood firm, saving all six break points he faced and converting three of nine chances. The match lasted one hour and 30 minutes.

“I came out at a really high level,” said Shelton, who earned his fifth career title and third at ATP 500 level following Tokyo in 2023 and Dallas earlier this year.

“I have done that before against him, but the toughest thing is maintaining it, as he raises his level. I was able to do that in the second set, hanging in there when he played some great tennis, and I came through to win it in straight sets.

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“I am happy with my performance this week. I got better and better as the week went on, and I am pleased with the work my team put in here.”

Shelton received a prize cheque of €478,935, a brand-new BMW iX3 and traditional Bavarian Lederhosen. He also collected 500 ATP Ranking points.

“The car is great. It might be difficult to get it back to Florida, where I live,” Shelton said with a smile.

The Atlanta native now holds the biggest clay-court title by an American man since Andre Agassi captured the ATP Masters 1000 in Rome in 2002, the year Shelton was born. He made clear he sees this victory as part of a broader push on the surface.

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“It’s huge. I have big ambitions on clay – a surface I want to keep improving on each year. It has become one of my favourite surfaces to play on.

“It’s a short season and some of the Americans choose not to play every event. But we had two guys in the quarterfinals of the French Open last year. Success on clay is coming back. I am looking forward to being part of this progression of U.S. men’s tennis on clay. On the women’s side, they have a lockdown as they won the French last year. We as the men have some more to do but we are heading into the right direction. This is just one step in a long swing and let’s see what happens.”

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Ben Shelton claims Munich ATP 500 — biggest American men’s clay title in 24 years

Ben Shelton won the Munich ATP 500 on clay, beating Flavio Cobolli 6-2, 7-5, biggest since 2002 now

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Ben Shelton added the largest clay-court title of his career on Sunday, taking the ATP 500 crown in Munich.

The 23-year-old lefty, ranked World No. 6, defeated Flavio Cobolli in straight sets, 6-2, 7-5, to secure the tournament title on the clay in Munich, Germany. The victory represents Shelton’s most significant result on clay to date and a clear milestone in his young career.

Shelton’s Munich triumph is notable beyond his personal résumé. No American man had won a clay-court title above the ATP 250 level in 24 years. The last to do so was eight-time Grand Slam champion Andre Agassi, who captured the Masters 1000 event in Rome in May of 2002. Shelton was born five months after that Rome victory, in October of 2002, making this achievement the first of its kind for an American man since before he was born.

The scoreline in the final, 6-2, 7-5, underscores Shelton’s command on the day and his ability to close out a big match on a surface that historically has been less favorable to American men. The ATP 500 title in Munich will stand as the standout clay result of his season and a rare high-level clay accomplishment for a U.S. male player.

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This win on European clay adds important momentum for Shelton and marks a clear historical footnote: an American man capturing a clay title at the ATP 500 level or above for the first time since Agassi’s Rome triumph in 2002. For Shelton, the Munich trophy is both a personal landmark and a noteworthy moment for American men’s tennis on clay.

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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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