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ATP Australian Open Grand Slam

Tommy Paul arrives in Melbourne fit, focused and launching a new foundation

Tommy Paul returned inside the Top 20 after a long break, rebuilding body and launching a foundation

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Tommy Paul returned to the Australian Open ranked inside the Top 20 after taking most of the last six months off. The break followed a taxing 2025 season and a foot injury at Wimbledon that ultimately sidelined him at the end of August.

“I had a lot of opportunities to play points in December coming into the first couple of tournaments of the year,” Paul told me of his extended pre-season after advancing into the second round of the Australian Open. “I knew my level a little bit better.”

Paul shut his season down after the 2025 US Open and said his rest might have begun even earlier. “I really knew around French Open, beginning of French Open I knew at some point in the year I was going to have to be shutting it down,” said Paul, who made the quarterfinals in Paris despite an abdominal injury. “I kind of just extended maybe a little too long. Probably shouldn’t have gone and played Wimbledon. Probably shouldn’t have played US Open.”

The pause cost him a shot at the Nitto ATP Finals, but it also gave him time to repair his body and reset. By December he was competing again at the Garden Cup at Madison Square Garden; a month later he reached his first tour semifinal since May at the Adelaide International.

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“I mean, it was a lot of long days,” Paul said of his pre-season. “Spent a lot of time on the body.

“First thing’s first is getting all the mobility back in your joints and your legs, your hips. Then from there, it’s kind of building a bit of cardio, which is hard to do, because, I mean, you don’t want to do impact when you are hurting, so we’re doing no-impact cardio, which means probably you have to do more of it.”

In his opening match he was efficient, serving 20 aces and dropping just four points on his first serve in a victory over fellow American Alexander Kovacevic. “I don’t know if that was temperature or the courts are just faster, but it took a little while to get in the rhythm from the ground,” said Paul, who struck twice as many winners as errors (38 to 16), “but luckily, I came out serving really well today.”

The time off also allowed him to launch the Kids Outdoors Foundation with fiancée Paige Lorenze. “There’s quite a few tournaments in South Florida, like Delray or Miami, and getting a group of kids that have never been to tournaments and just getting kids excited about tennis, getting kids excited about being outside,” Paul previewed.

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“Yeah, it’s an exciting thing. It’s something we talked about doing for a while now. I think it’s something that means a lot to both of us. Both of us had so many opportunities given to us through sports growing up, and I think anything that we can do to help, we’re going to try and do it.”

One of 21 Americans in the men’s draw, Paul reflected on experience and calm. I’m getting older…But, I mean, I think for me it helps. Experience, it means a lot in this sport. I feel like you gain a lot from experience coming down here. Playing in the first round when you are in your younger years, you feel so nervous. You don’t know really what you’re getting yourself into. I mean, I know what I’m getting myself into every time I play.

250 ATP Open Occitanie

Arthur Fils wins on comeback at Open Occitanie after back injury

Arthur Fils returned from a back stress fracture to win in Montpellier with 50 winners and 14 aces.

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No. 6 seed Arthur Fils made a successful return to competition at the Open Occitanie, his first event since early August 2025 following a lower back injury. The 21-year-old produced 50 winners, including 14 aces, to defeat countryman Valentin Royer 7-6(7), 6-7(4), 6-2 in two hours and 33 minutes in Montpellier.

“It’s been a while since I last competed, so returning to the circuit is great,” Fils told press during Media Day. “I feel a lot of joy and happiness. I’m very excited to be back on the courts with so many fans.

“It’s been a long process. I’m back, so that means everything is positive, both mentally and physically.”

Fils withdrew from Roland Garros in May 2025 after suffering a lower back injury that was later diagnosed as a stress fracture during a five-set, four-and-a-half-hour second-round battle against Jaume Munar. That match was later selected as the second-best of 2025, according to Steve Tignor.

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He tried to resume play in Canada in August 2025, winning a singles match and teaming with Ben Shelton to reach a doubles quarterfinal, but the comeback was short-lived. He then announced that he would shut down his season to recover. “Excluding Roland Garros, I think withdrawing from the Masters 1000 in Paris was the hardest moment,” he said in Montpellier.

The injury interrupted a rapid rise: Fils climbed to a career-high No. 14 in April 2025 after runs to the quarterfinals at Indian Wells, Miami (including a win over world No. 2 Alexander Zverev) and Monte Carlo, and a semifinal in Barcelona. Now ranked No. 42, he arrives in Montpellier determined to rebuild and defend points.

Fils skipped the opening weeks of the 2026 season, missing the Australian swing while continuing rehabilitation, a decision he outlined in a vlog on his YouTube channel. He has worked with a nutritionist and said he lost “six or seven kilos since Roland Garros.” “I’m 21, I still have around 10 to 15 years of career [ahead], so it’s not a race,” he added. “I work with a lot of people to try to start fresh … and I think that now I’m on the right track, so I’ve got to continue.”

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ATP Australian Open Grand Slam

Djokovic’s Australian Open run: 20 milestones that reshaped the records

Djokovic’s Melbourne run rewrote records: 100+ wins at three Slams and 400 Grand Slam victories. now

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Novak Djokovic did not claim what would have been the 25th Grand Slam title, falling to Carlos Alcaraz in four sets in the final, but his run in Melbourne reconfigured several all-time marks. A first-round 6-3, 6-2, 6-2 win over Pedro Martinez made him only the second player, male or female, to reach 100 career wins at the Australian Open, behind Roger Federer, who finished with 102. Serena Williams sits next with 92.

With 101 wins at Roland Garros and 102 at Wimbledon, Djokovic became the first player in tennis history to register 100 or more career wins at three different Grand Slams. He remains two wins shy of 100 at the US Open, where he has 95 career wins.

The opening victory extended a streak to 76 consecutive first-round Grand Slam wins, the longest in the Open Era. His last first-round exit came in 2006 against Paul Goldstein. An identical 6-3, 6-2, 6-2 second-round win over Francesco Maestrelli stretched his run to 64 straight victories across the opening two rounds of majors and left him 32-0 against qualifiers at Grand Slams. Maestrelli had qualified and beaten Terence Atmane in the first round.

A 6-3, 6-4, 7-6 (4) third-round victory over Botic van de Zandschulp made Djokovic the first player, male or female, to reach 400 career Grand Slam match wins. That result also marked his 70th career appearance in a Grand Slam round of 16, surpassing Federer’s 69, and improved his Australian Open third-round record to 18-0, with a 52-5 set record in those matches.

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Jakub Mensik’s withdrawal before the fourth round due to an abdominal injury advanced Djokovic into a 16th Australian Open quarterfinal, a men’s record, and his 65th Grand Slam quarterfinal overall. Lorenzo Musetti retired in the quarters, and Djokovic then defeated Jannik Sinner in the semifinal, 3-6, 6-3, 4-6, 6-4, 6-4, ending Sinner’s 19-match Australian Open winning streak and several other streaks Sinner held.

That semifinal was Djokovic’s 20th Top 5 win at the Australian Open, tying Rafael Nadal (at Roland Garros) for the most career Top 5 wins by a man at a single major in ATP rankings history since 1973. The victory was also his 104th match win in Melbourne, two clear of Federer, and put him into an 11th Australian Open final and a 38th Grand Slam final.

At 38, he became the oldest man in the Open Era to reach the Australian Open final and the oldest man at a major since Ken Rosewall reached finals as a 39-year-old in 1974. This is the record-extending 17th different season in which he has reached at least one major final, doing it in 2007, 2008, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022, 2023, 2024 and now 2016. He has reached 38 finals in the 81 majors he has played and 38 finals in the last 70 majors he has played, a stretch dating back to the 2007 US Open. The run also returned the 24-time Grand Slam champion to the Top 3 in the rankings; he had spent a record 428 career weeks at No. 1 and had been oscillating between No. 4 and No. 7 for the previous 16 months, but he moved back to No. 3 for the first time since the two weeks of the 2024 US Open.

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ATP Australian Open Grand Slam

How Djokovic’s Australian Open run reset records and snapped streaks

Djokovic’s Australian Open run rewrote records: 100+ wins at three Slams, 400 Grand Slam wins. 2026.

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Novak Djokovic’s march to the Australian Open final reconfigured the record books even though he did not lift the title. His first-round 6-3, 6-2, 6-2 victory over Pedro Martinez made him only the second player, male or female, to reach 100 career wins at the Australian Open, joining Roger Federer. Combined with 101 wins at Roland Garros and 102 at Wimbledon, he became the first player in history to register 100 or more career wins at three different Grand Slams.

That opening match also extended a streak: it was his 76th consecutive first-round win at Grand Slams, the longest in the Open Era. He has not exited in the first round since his 2006 loss to Paul Goldstein. A second-round 6-3, 6-2, 6-2 victory over Francesco Maestrelli pushed his run to 64 consecutive wins across the first two rounds of majors and left him 32-0 against qualifiers at Grand Slams.

The third-round 6-3, 6-4, 7-6 (4) triumph over Botic van de Zandschulp produced another landmark: Djokovic became the first player, male or female, to record 400 career Grand Slam match wins. That result also marked his 70th career round-of-16 appearance at a major and improved his third-round record at the Australian Open to 18-0.

Jakub Mensik’s fourth-round withdrawal moved Djokovic into a 16th Australian Open quarterfinal, a men’s record, and into his 65th Grand Slam quarterfinal. After Lorenzo Musetti retired in the quarters, Djokovic defeated Jannik Sinner in a five-set semifinal, 3-6, 6-3, 4-6, 6-4, 6-4, ending Sinner’s 19-match Australian Open winning streak and several longer streaks Sinner held against top opponents.

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The win over Sinner was Djokovic’s 20th Top 5 victory at the Australian Open, tying Rafael Nadal (at Roland Garros) for the most career Top 5 wins by a man at a single major in ATP rankings history. It also lifted Djokovic to 104 career wins in Melbourne, two clear of Federer, and into his 11th Australian Open final and 38th Grand Slam final.

At 38, he became the oldest man in the Open Era to reach the Australian Open final and the oldest man at a major since Ken Rosewall in 1974. This marked the 17th different season in which he reached at least one major final, doing it in 2007, 2008, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022, 2023, 2024 and now 2016. He has reached 38 finals in the 81 majors he has played and 38 finals in the last 70 majors he has played. The result also returned the 24-time Grand Slam champion to the Top 3 in the rankings, his first time there since the two weeks of the 2024 US Open; he has spent a record 428 career weeks at No. 1.

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