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Different Roads, Same Peak: How Collins, Navarro and Paul Built Top-10 Careers

Three American players, three distinct paths to former Top 10 status and how each handles on-court challenges.

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The recent generation of American players shows there is no single blueprint to reach the top. Danielle Collins, Emma Navarro and Tommy Paul are former Top 10 players whose careers illustrate contrasting routes to elite status and different ways of solving on-court problems.

Collins arrived at the professional game without a notable junior resume and chose college before breaking through. Her résumé includes a runner-up finish at the 2022 Australian Open, two titles last spring including her first at WTA 1000 level, and the longest winning streak of her career. Those peaks came amid extended spells of injuries and health challenges that forced her to be flexible and adapt to how she was feeling.

On her own approach she said, “What makes a great player a great player is their ability to change their patterns before their opponent starts reading those patterns … I try to always be unpredictable,” and, “I go off my feelings, for sure. I take what my coach says and I just decide how I’m going to appy it, but at the end of the day, you don’t really have that much time to think out there.”

Navarro, Collins’ Billie Jean King Cup teammate, followed a different path. She reached three girls’ major finals in 2019, also chose college before turning pro, and prefers a steadier, habitual game plan. She described her method: “I think you have to find the balance a little bit between trusting what you do, and not changing that up too soon just because something isn’t working in the first two or three games,” and, “I like to keep what I do pretty consistent, and make a couple of tweaks here and there based on who I’m playing and how they play.”

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Navarro added, “I pride myself a lot on my ability to problem-solve and adjust when needed…when things get tough, I tend to get very inward-facing, so I’m learning how to trust myself through thick and thin.”

Paul occupies a middle ground. A former Roland Garros junior champion, he required nearly a decade after that junior success to find sustained results in the men’s game. Off court he focuses on his own development; in matches he concentrates on opponents and adjustments. “For me, I just like going out and competing, no matter the match or the points on the line,” he said. “It’s very rare that Plan A works every time,” and, “You’re always adjusting something whether it’s your serve, where you’re standing on return, how much you’re coming to net,” he says. “You’re always adjusting … there’s no sport that Plan A works every time. You always have to adjust.”

Their stories are the subject of Matchup Mindset, a 15-episode series that examines how players think, prepare and find edges in matches. Together Collins, Navarro and Paul demonstrate that different temperaments and processes can produce the same outcome: a place among the sport’s best.

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ATP Masters Monte Carlo

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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ATP ATP 500 BMW Open

Cobolli dedicates Munich upset of Zverev to late 13-year-old friend

Cobolli dedicated his upset of Zverev in Munich to a 13-year-old friend who died yesterday in match.

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Flavio Cobolli produced the headline result in Saturday’s semi-finals at the BMW Open by Bitpanda, defeating defending champion and top seed Alexander Zverev to reach the final. The fourth seed dominated on Center Court at the MTTC Iphitos in front of a capacity crowd and in ideal conditions, striking 32 winners and losing just eight points on his first serve. Cobolli converted four of five break-point chances and closed the match in one hour and nine minutes.

“A friend of mine passed away yesterday. He was only 13 years old. This win is for him,” an emotional Cobolli said during his on-court interview.

“It was one of my best matches ever, against one of my best friends on Tour,” added the world No. 16, who recorded his first victory over Zverev in their third meeting. “He’s a really good guy and we have a great relationship with everyone on his team, so it was a little bit tough to play against him. But today I think I played one of my best matches, and I’m really happy about my performance.”

Zverev acknowledged Cobolli’s level while reflecting on his own condition. “It was certainly one of his better matches,” said Zverev. “However, I’ve played a lot of tennis lately and my legs just weren’t there anymore. A few days off will definitely help. I’ll have six days until my next match, which is more than I’ve had recently. I’ll try to use that time wisely to be ready and perform well again in Madrid.”

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The German, who turns 29 on Monday, added: “I’ll skip the party for now. I need to recover first.” He left open whether he will stick to his planned schedule of playing in Madrid, Rome and Hamburg, later noting, “Carlos Alcaraz and Jannik Sinner are handling it quite smartly by not playing every tournament. Paris is the big goal.”

Later, No. 2 seed Ben Shelton, runner-up to Zverev in Munich last year, beat Slovakian qualifier Alex Molcan 6-3, 6-4 to reach the final. Shelton fired six aces, won 73 percent of his first-service points and closed the match in one hour and 36 minutes. “Alex had beaten a bunch of great players throughout the week. The scoreline doesn’t show it, but it was a really tight match today,” he said. “It’s pretty cool to reach back-to-back finals here in Munich. That’s the first time I’ve achieved that feat. I love doing that here and it gives me a lot of confidence.”

Cobolli, a 23-year-old Florence native, is chasing his fourth tour-level title and second of the season after his win in Acapulco. He could claim his second ATP 500 trophy on German soil after Hamburg last year when he meets Shelton in the final; the American leads their head-to-head 3–2 and their only previous clay meeting was won by Cobolli at the Geneva Open in Switzerland in 2024.

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500 ATP Barcelona Open Banc Sabadell

Fils rallies past Rafael Jodar in Barcelona semis to reach 100 career wins

Arthur Fils rallied from a set down to defeat Rafael Jodar in Barcelona semis, his 100th career win.

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Arthur Fils overcame a set deficit to defeat Rafael Jodar in the semifinals of the Barcelona Open Banc Sabadell, winning 3-6, 6-3, 6-2. The victory marked multiple milestones in a single match for the 21-year-old Frenchman.

Fils erased the early advantage Jodar established when the Spanish teenager took the first set. He recovered by taking the second set 6-3 and then closed out the match 6-2 in the decider. The win ended Jodar’s eight-match winning streak that began with his first ATP title in Marrakech last week and continued with three more wins in Barcelona.

Jodar had also been riding a run of set dominance, having won 13 sets in a row before Fils rallied to halt that sequence. That combination of recent form and momentum made Fils’ comeback more significant.

Most notably, the win was the 100th tour-level victory of Fils’ career. At 21 years old, he became the first man born in 2004 or later to reach 100 tour-level wins. The result advances Fils to the Barcelona final and leaves Jodar’s surge halted at the semifinal stage.

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The match underlined Fils’ capacity to close out big moments against an in-form opponent and provided a notable career landmark in the 2026 season. His progression through an ATP 500 event and the accumulation of 100 tour-level wins underline the trajectory he has followed in recent seasons.

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