ATP Australian Open Grand Slam
Five things to watch on Australian Open Day 2: Gauff’s serve, Djokovic’s 25th push
Serve motion under scrutiny for Gauff; Anisimova, Eala, Andreeva and Djokovic headline Day 2. Roundup
The first Sunday produced surprises and set the table for a fuller Monday at the Australian Open. Venus Williams lost a close one, Flavio Cobolli lost decisively, Carlos Alcaraz won without Juan Carlos Ferrero courtside, Michael Zheng upset Seb Korda and Marta Kostyuk exited earlier than some expected. With the 2026 season now under way, Monday’s slate offers a first extended look at several players.
One: Coco Gauff’s service motion. By motion, I mean service motion, of course. Gauff spent the off-season working with serve specialist Gavin MacMillan and showed signs of a smoother delivery at United Cup, even if double faults remained an issue. She opens in Laver against 91st-ranked Kamilla Rakhimova. Gauff, who reached the semis and quarters the last two years in Melbourne, won their only prior meeting in Beijing, 6-4, 6-0.
Two: Amanda Anisimova’s consistency. The 24-year-old, eight years on tour, rocketed from No. 36 to No. 4 last season and now faces the task of holding that ground. She lost her first event of 2026 to Kostyuk in Brisbane. On Monday she is second up on Margaret Court Arena against 25-year-old, 86th-ranked Simona Waltert of Switzerland; they have never met.
Three: Alex Eala’s following. The 20-year-old, ranked 49th, draws a vocal Filipino contingent wherever she plays. She makes her Australian Open main-draw debut on Court 6 against Alycia Parks. The two have not met, and Eala arrives off a semifinal run in Auckland.
Four: Mirra Andreeva’s early-season form. The 18-year-old faces Donna Vekic, 29 and ranked 72, who pushed Andreeva to 6-4 in the third in their only meeting. Andreeva rose into the Top 10 after defeating Aryna Sabalenka in the Indian Wells final last spring but faded late in 2025 and missed the WTA Finals. She has started 2026 at 6-1 and won Adelaide without dropping a set.
Five: Novak Djokovic’s title chase. Making his season debut after withdrawing from Adelaide, the 38-year-old has set a tempering line for himself. “24 is not a bad number,” Djokovic says he has been telling himself lately. He faces 20-year-old Pedro Martinez, ranked 71, a Spaniard whose lone title came on clay and who has been as high as 36. Martinez’s consistency should force Djokovic to work for the win.
1000 ATP Miami Open
Arthur Fils survives four match points to edge Tommy Paul in Miami classic
Fils saved four match points to stun Tommy Paul, winning 6-7(3) 7-6(4) 7-6(6) in Miami quarterfinals
Arthur Fils produced a late-night escape at the Miami Open, saving four match points to defeat Tommy Paul 6-7 (3), 7-6 (4), 7-6 (6) in a quarterfinal that featured no service breaks. The 21-year-old Frenchman rallied from 6-2 down in the deciding tiebreak, running off the final six points to complete a two-hour-and-49-minute victory.
There were no breaks of serve across the contest, and Fils’ only break point of the night came at 5-6 in the third set, when Paul’s 40-0 lead on serve disappeared. Paul, who played aggressively and matched Fils’ heavy, spinny shotmaking with bold ball striking, overcame a match point to earn four of his own before the match turned.
Fils’ comeback caps a strong return from injury. Last year he was the only player to reach the quarterfinal stage at the season’s opening three 1000-level tournaments, but a stress fracture sustained during a five-set win over Jaume Munar at Roland Garros forced him to withdraw from his home major and limited him to a single appearance in Toronto until he returned at Montpellier last month.
Since coming back, Fils has posted 13 wins in 17 matches, five of them against Top 30 opponents. He finished runner-up to Carlos Alcaraz at the ATP 500 in Doha, and matched his 2025 Indian Wells last-eight run ahead of his deeper run in Miami. In the third round he produced “the best match I ever played in my life” with a 6-0, 6-1 victory over Stefanos Tsitsipas.
Fils had 2,935 points on his ranking following last year’s French Open. The win over Paul is projected to raise him to 1,640 points in Monday’s rankings. Reaching the final would be worth 1,890 points, while lifting a maiden 1000 crown would move him to 2,240 points. He will face Jiri Lehecka in Friday’s semifinal.
1000 ATP Miami Open
Lehecka Advances to Second Masters 1000 Semifinal at Miami Open
Lehecka beat Martin Landaluce 7-6 (1), 7-5 to reach his second Masters 1000 semifinal in Miami.
Jiri Lehecka reached his second career Masters 1000 semifinal Wednesday, the 24-year-old Czech defeating Spanish qualifier Martin Landaluce 7-6 (1), 7-5 at the Miami Open.
“I knew what to expect,” Lehecka told Prakash Amritraj. “I knew he was going to play well and I knew that the level will be there. I did everything I could to stay in the match and work my way through the difficult situations.”
Lehecka had to navigate tense endings to both sets. Landaluce forced a tiebreak in the first set and made a late surge in the second, but Lehecka’s experience proved decisive as he closed out the match.
“These were the crucial moments where I feel I showed that I’m a little bit more experienced and I also did some good shotmaking there.
“The thing I saw about him was he really was the one who was winning the points. He went for it, he was very aggressive. It wasn’t just that some of the guys didn’t feel good or had a bad day. He was the one who really punished them and was aggressive going into it.”
Lehecka, the tournament’s No. 21st seed, will await the winner of the quarterfinal between Tommy Paul and Arthur Fils.
“I think both guys are playing with a little more spin if I compare them to Martin today, but they’re more experienced,” said Lehecka, the tournament’s No. 21st seed. “Both of them are great competitors. Tommy’s playing on home soil. Arthur’s in great form.
“We’re going to see. I’m very curious how that match is going to go, but I think whoever wins, on this court in Miami, I have the weapons to challenge them.”
Lehecka last reached a Masters 1000 semifinal in 2024, a run that coincided with a back injury that later sidelined him for three months. The memories from that period remain vivid for the Czech.
“I have memories I will never forget from that week: good ones and bad ones, as well,” Lehecka told Amritraj. “I will never forget how I played Rafael Nadal in his last match in Madrid. That was huge. Every time someone is cheering against me, I think how I played Rafa in Madrid and how there were 13,000 people against me. My team were the only ones hoping I would win any point!”
1000 ATP Miami Open
Tiafoe leans on ‘No free lunches’ mindset ahead of Miami quarterfinal with Sinner
Tiafoe embraces a ‘No free lunches’ mindset as he prepares to challenge Jannik Sinner in Miami. Now.
Frances Tiafoe arrives at the Miami quarterfinals buoyed by a deliberate shift in approach, one he summed up as a “No free lunches” mentality as he prepares to meet second seed Jannik Sinner. The American has not faced a Top 2 opponent in regular tour play since the 2024 Cincinnati Open final, when Sinner prevailed 7-6 (4), 6-2. That drought ends Thursday with their return match at Hard Rock Stadium.
Sinner comes in red hot, having won a record 28 consecutive sets in ATP Masters 1000 competition en route to another trip to the last eight. He also carries an identical total of 28 consecutive victories against American opponents dating to the 2023 Shanghai Masters. Their head-to-head favors the Italian, who has won four of their five meetings and is chasing a maiden Sunshine Double.
Tiafoe, the No. 19 seed and world No. 20, has been tested through the early rounds in Miami. He staved off a pair of match points to eliminate reigning champion Jakub Mensik in a final-set tiebreaker, then recovered late to hold off Terence Atmane in the round of 16. He credits a tougher mindset for those escapes.
“I’m relying on suffering. No free lunches. If they’re going to get over the line, let them go and earn it,” he said. “Sometimes you gotta see what happens. Guys are nervous, too.
“Today felt like a bigger win than yesterday, to be honest. With the 4-4, 0-40 down and pulling that out, that’s not a match I win about a year ago.”
This is Tiafoe’s first ATP Masters 1000 quarterfinal since contesting the biggest title match of his career with Sinner. Asked about preparation and visualization, he was candid about his routine.
“I definitely take a second and think about the positive things that may go on in a match. As of late, I close my eyes and think about shaking the guy’s hand with the win. Positive plays are going to help me win. Kind of put myself in that position before it already happens. I think that’s very real. Manifestation is monumental.”
Prakash Amritraj closed on a lighter note: “Big Foe, Lulu Foe, all this, but Miami Foe looks good” closed Amritraj.
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