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ATP Finals Next Gen ATP Finals

How the Next Gen ATP Finals became tennis’ laboratory for the next generation

How the Next Gen ATP Finals grew from rule trials into a showcase of men’s tennis’ rising stars now.

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When the Next Gen ATP Finals were announced in London in November 2016, Chris Kermode framed the event as a forward-looking experiment. “The world’s top eight 20-and-under singles players will compete in a special season finale,” he announces, a competition intended to spotlight emerging talent during a moment of change. Kermode added context for the initiative. “Everybody in the sport has promoted heavily the Big Four for the last 10 years,” Kermode explained. “What we need to do as the ATP is market many more players to a wider audience. We’re at almost a changing of the guard.”

The tournament was conceived in part as a successor to the discontinued ATP Challenger Tour Finals that had been held in São Paulo. “The Challenger Finals was a good idea. It never established roots,” Kermode said. “This is a blend of that idea—and I think it will be hugely successful because it has other elements.” The inaugural edition in Milan in 2017 introduced a package of ten experimental rule changes, and the event has remained the sport’s main playground for innovation.

The roll call of past champions reads like a timeline of progression: Hyeon Chung won the first title in Milan, followed by Stefanos Tsitsipas, Jannik Sinner, Carlos Alcaraz, Brandon Nakashima, Hamad Medjedovic and most recently Joao Fonseca. Flavio Cobolli, this year’s Davis Cup hero for Italy, qualified for the 2023 Next Gen ATP Finals in Jeddah.

Staged in Jeddah since 2023, with this season marking the final time the tournament will be held in Saudi Arabia, the event continues to highlight a highly competitive and global cohort. Leading the Race to Jeddah is 20-year-old Jakub Mensik, who broke through by claiming his maiden ATP Masters 1000 title in Miami. Close behind is Joao Fonseca, a two-time ATP champion this season in Basel and Buenos Aires. Nineteen-year-old Learner Tien captured his first ATP Tour trophy at the Moselle Open in Metz. Twenty-year-old Alexander Blockx added Challenger wins in Oeiras and Bratislava.

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Other contenders include Dino Prizmic, 20, with Challenger titles in Bratislava and Zagreb; 19-year-old Martin Landaluce, winner in Orléans; Nicolai Budkov Kjaer, 19, who secured four Challenger trophies this year in Glasgow, Tampere, Astana and Mouilleron-Le-Captif; Nishesh Basavareddy, noted for an ATP 250 semifinal in Auckland; Rafael Jodar, 19, with three Challenger titles in Hersonissos, Lincoln and Charlottesville; and 18-year-old Justin Engel, who reached the Boss Open quarterfinals in Stuttgart and won his first Challenger in Hamburg.

Abierto Mexicano Telcel ATP ATP 500

Cobolli Downs Tiafoe to Claim Acapulco Title, Poised for Career-High No. 15

Cobolli beats Tiafoe 7-6(4), 6-4 to win Acapulco; third ATP title and a projected rise to No. 15 now

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Flavio Cobolli completed a remarkable week in Acapulco with a 7-6 (4), 6-4 victory over Frances Tiafoe to lift the ATP 500 trophy. The straight-sets scoreline belies a hard-fought encounter that lasted two hours and nine minutes, with the opening set alone running 70 minutes.

The win is Cobolli’s third ATP title and matches the biggest level of his previous triumphs. His first two tour-level trophies came last year, both on clay: Bucharest, an ATP 250, and Hamburg, an ATP 500. With the rankings update on Monday, he is projected to move from No. 20 to a new career-high of No. 15, surpassing his prior peak of No. 17.

Both finalists had dramatic semifinal nights. Cobolli rallied from 3-1 down in the deciding set to beat Miomir Kecmanovic, 7-6 (5), 3-6, 6-4. Tiafoe survived an all-American duel with Brandon Nakashima, 3-6, 7-6 (6), 6-4, after Nakashima served for the match at 6-5 in the second set and then came within two points of victory at 6-all in the tiebreak.

In the final Tiafoe threatened early, holding a 3-1 advantage in the first-set tiebreak before Cobolli edged the set. Tiafoe rallied again in the second, breaking back to level at 4-all, but Cobolli closed the match by winning eight of the final 10 points, breaking for 5-4 and sealing the title with an ace, his 10th of the match.

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The result also carries historical notes. At 23, Cobolli is the youngest champion in Acapulco since a 22-year-old Dominic Thiem won in 2016. He is the first Italian to capture an ATP title this year and, as the nation’s No. 3, will join countrymen Jannik Sinner and Lorenzo Musetti, currently ranked No. 2 and No. 5, in the Top 15.

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ATP BNP Paribas Open Masters

Bouchard: Indian Wells an ideal stage for Ben Shelton to carry U.S. hopes

Bouchard backs Ben Shelton as top U.S. hope at Indian Wells amid Paul and Fritz challenges this week

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The 2026 BNP Paribas Open arrives with main-draw action beginning Wednesday, March 4, and American men figure prominently in the conversation at Tennis Paradise. Eugenie Bouchard singles out a compact group of U.S. contenders and places Ben Shelton at the center of expectations.

Ben Shelton. His game has shown clear evolution and he often lifts his level at the biggest events. With Indian Wells regarded as the premier U.S. tournament after the US Open, the setting feels appropriate for Shelton, who already won a first Masters 1000 title in Canada last summer.

Tommy Paul. After a 2025 season hampered by injury, Paul appears to have recovered and has produced a strong start to 2026. His Delray Beach win over Taylor Fritz—the only American man to win Indian Wells since Andre Agassi in 2001—was certainly a statement about his readiness to return to the Top 10 and beyond. Back to full health in Australia, he played great to reach the second week and gave Carlos Alcaraz all he could handle over three close sets in the fourth round. If he stays healthy and consistent, Paul could be the most dangerous American in the draw.

Taylor Fritz. Local support and familiarity with the event add weight to his prospects. “Total transparency: how can i go against my man in his hometown tournament? A tournament he’s the only one of his countrymen to have won before, no less.” That hometown element and previous success at the event create a compelling backdrop for his campaign.

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Indian Wells will demand serve, return and stamina across large courts and long days. Between Shelton’s upward trajectory, Paul’s return to form and Fritz’s home-court narrative, the U.S. contingent arrives with several credible candidates to produce the best American result as the Sunshine Swing begins.

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ATP ATP 500 Dubai Duty Free Tennis Championships

Medvedev awarded Dubai crown after Griekspoor withdrawal amid tense regional events

Medvedev awarded Dubai title after Griekspoor withdrawal amid injury and regional conflict. upheaval

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Daniil Medvedev was declared champion at the Dubai Duty Free Tennis Championships after Tallon Griekspoor withdrew from the final with a left hamstring injury, handing Medvedev a walkover just hours before the United Arab Emirates shut its airspace.

The No. 3 seed and former Dubai champion received the trophy amid an unusual and tense championship Saturday. The walkover gave Medvedev his second ATP title of the year. “Not how I want to win a final,” he wrote. “Hoping the injury for (Tallon) is not too bad and wishing him a speedy recovery.”

Griekspoor hurt his left hamstring in Friday’s semifinal against Andrey Rublev but managed to win 7-5, 7-6 (6) despite the pain. He told those gathered at the trophy ceremony: “I went to the hospital this morning and had a couple of scans, which showed something serious,” and added, “It kept me from coming on court tonight and will keep me from the court in the coming weeks.”

For Medvedev, it was the first time in his career that he has repeated a title in the same city. Previously he had amassed 26 career titles at 26 different tournaments. “That’s what’s crazy!” he said. “I never did it in any city in the world, and the first time I do it, it’s with a walkover…”

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He reflected on his week on court: “We knew before the start of the week, the way I was practicing, I couldn’t miss a ball. We knew it was going to be a great week. It was a great week and I’m looking forward to the next tournaments to come.”

The tournament was overshadowed by regional conflict that led to nearby strikes and retaliatory attacks, including a reported missile strike on the Palm Jumeirah Fairmont Hotel. Flight cancellations followed and departures from Dubai International Airport were suspended as a precaution. The tournament venue sits less than five minutes from the airport, a proximity that likely eased departures once travel resumed.

The men’s doubles final proceeded earlier, with No. 3 seeds Harri Heliovaara and Henry Patten defeating No. 2 seeds Mate Pavic and Marcelo Arevalo 7-5, 7-5 on Center Court.

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