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ATP Australian Open Grand Slam

Bergs’ United Cup form and a viral celebration preceded a four-set Australian Open exit

Belgian Zizou Bergs entered 2026 riding United Cup momentum and a viral twerking celebration. Ahead.

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Zizou Bergs began 2026 with momentum on court and attention off it. The 26-year-old Belgian, a Top 40 player, helped power Team Belgium to the United Cup semifinals alongside Elise Mertens, going 3–1 in the event. Bergs recorded impressive wins over Felix Auger-Aliassime, Jakub Mensik and Stan Wawrinka during that run.

His on-court play was matched by a moment that spread widely online. Bergs’ twerking during post-match celebrations became one of the tournament’s most viral clips and furthered his profile as a budding TikTok star.

Ahead of the Australian Open, Bergs addressed the celebrations in a short interview:

Q. Who taught you to twerk like that?

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ZIZOU BERGS: (laughing) I don’t know who taught me! I think I just did it myself. Then I saw some ridiculous stuff, and I just imitated it without really trying it.

I had people tell me, ‘Hey you had a fun week at the United Cup, right, because you were all over my Instagram!’ I was like, Yeah I guess!

Sometimes it’s quite annoying, too, because I can be very ridiculous but I can also be bloody serious. And then I’m in a match and I’m having fun but also really serious, and I’m sitting here drinking… And then I look at the big screen and see myself twerking. Then I’m like, OK let’s not look at the screen! Let’s just keep focusing right now.

But yeah, I guess it’s a part of me too.

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At the Australian Open Bergs drew a difficult first-round opponent in Hubert Hurkacz. Ranked No. 43, Bergs won the opening set, but Hurkacz — who had been sidelined with injury since June 2025 and who had announced his return with a statement win over world No. 3 Alexander Zverev at the United Cup — recovered to win in four sets. The match ended Bergs’ bid at the major but followed a week that combined significant victories and an unmistakable viral moment.

1000 ATP Miami Open

Miami Open Preview: Pegula vs. Rybakina and two close quarterfinal tests

Pegula and Rybakina meet again in Miami; we also assess Paul-Fils and Lehecka-Landaluce. Read picks!

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The Miami Open brings another chapter in the recent rivalry between Elena Rybakina and Jessica Pegula. The pair have met at the Billie Jean King Cup, the WTA Finals, the Australian Open, Indian Wells and now Miami, with Rybakina holding a 4-0 edge in those meetings. Pegula has challenged her, taking sets and pushing tiebreaks, but Rybakina’s serve and court craft have remained decisive.

Both women arrive in Miami unbeaten in three matches and comfortable on the courts. Rybakina reached the final here in 2023 and 2024; Pegula made the final in 2025. One variable that could matter is the start time: the match is scheduled for 1:00 P.M., when conditions are expected to be warmer and quicker. Pegula prefers quick conditions and has not had them in recent meetings with Rybakina, which came at night in Melbourne and on the slower Indian Wells courts. That switch could help the American and add a few miles per hour to her game. Winner: Pegula

The bottom half of the ATP draw has produced intriguing quarterfinals. Martin Landaluce, a 20-year-old product of the Rafa Nadal Academy and the 2022 US Open boys champion, has been one of Miami’s breakthrough players. Counting qualifiers, he has won six matches here, three in three sets, and in his last match he recovered from a 6-2 first-set deficit to beat Sebastian Korda and saved a match point en route.

Landaluce meets Jiri Lehecka for the first time. Both play with efficient, easy power; Landaluce has momentum, while Lehecka, the 22nd-ranked veteran, has just beaten Taylor Fritz in his best match of the season. Fuel and composure are the deciding factors. Winner: Lehecka

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Tommy Paul and Arthur Fils present another difficult call. The players are close in the rankings, with Paul 23rd and Fils 31st. Both are athletic, strike the ball well and have shown solid form this season — Paul at 14-6 and Fils 12-4 as he returns from a lengthy layoff. In Miami each survived at least one three-set match. Paul will have a home crowd and the evening conditions, while Fils is still rebuilding his rhythm. This one is a coin flip.

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ATP Masters Miami Open

Nadal urges calm after Alcaraz’s Miami Open exit

Nadal: Alcaraz’s Miami loss is not cause for alarm after his Australian Open and Doha form in 2026.

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Carlos Alcaraz’s third-round loss to Sebastian Korda at the Miami Open prompted questions about the Spaniard’s form, but Rafael Nadal dismissed the idea that the result signals a crisis.

The 22-year-old bowed out in Miami for the second year running. His 2026 record stands at 17–2, yet Nadal told reporters in Madrid on Tuesday that criticism is exaggerated. “I mean, when he’s just come off winning the Australian Open, he’s won seven Grand Slams, he’s No. 1 in the world… So, what? Is he supposed to win all of the matches of the year?” Nadal told press. “That’s never going to happen. So there’s your answer.”

Alcaraz’s Sunshine Swing had mixed results. He reached the semifinals in Indian Wells before being upset by No. 11 seed Daniil Medvedev. In Miami he won one match, a high-profile victory over Joao Fonseca, then fell in three sets to No. 32 Sebastian Korda, a result described as the American’s biggest career win.

Nadal argued that a title-less March should not erase Alcaraz’s achievements earlier in the season. The Spaniard captured the Australian Open, becoming the youngest man to complete the Career Grand Slam, won an ATP 500 title in Doha, retained the world No. 1 ranking and extended a 16-match unbeaten run that ended at Indian Wells. “Are we really going to worry about two defeats? I don’t think so,” Nadal said. “That doesn’t make sense, and we shouldn’t demand more from him.”

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Nadal, who received an honorary doctorate for excellence in sport from the Universidad Politécnica de Madrid, reflected on the pressures placed on young players in Spain and urged perspective. “I think what we all have to do is just congratulate Carlos and thank him for everything that he’s accomplishing,” he said. “In the end, he’s bringing a number of achievements to Spanish sport that, maybe 25 or 30 years ago, we wouldn’t have imagined…

“Maybe we’ve all gotten too used to it. But I’ve never lost perspective on how difficult the things are that Carlos is doing—or any athlete from Spain, or any other country.”

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ATP Masters Miami Open

Sinner Moves Past Federer to Third in Masters 1000 Winning Percentage

Jannik Sinner moved past Roger Federer to third in Masters 1000 win percentage after Miami win. Tue.

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Jannik Sinner added another statistical milestone to his season by moving ahead of Roger Federer for the third-best career winning percentage in Masters 1000 events. The list, which dates back to 1990, now places Sinner behind only Rafael Nadal and Novak Djokovic.

The shift came after Sinner beat Alex Michelsen 7-5, 7-6 (4) in the fourth round of the Miami Open on Tuesday. Less than 24 hours earlier he had set a separate Masters 1000 mark by breaking the record for most consecutive sets won at those events.

Sinner entered Miami at No. 5 on the all-time Masters 1000 winning percentage list. The sequence of results around the third round altered the standings: Carlos Alcaraz fell out of the spot ahead of Sinner after losing his third-round match, and Sinner’s third-round victory moved him to .7786, immediately behind Federer.

With the fourth-round victory over Michelsen, Sinner improved his career Masters 1000 winning percentage to .7803 and passed Federer for third place. According to the current standings, he cannot rise higher than third on the list even if he wins the Miami Open.

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The rapid progression up the Masters 1000 winning-percentage list has come alongside Sinner’s other form lines at these events this season, reinforcing his consistency at the highest level of the tour’s Masters series. The milestones underline a sustained run of results in tournaments that have been tracked since 1990 and place Sinner among the sport’s most efficient performers at the Masters 1000 level.

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