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ATP Australian Open Grand Slam

Fritz advances with straight-sets win, eyes 40-year-old Wawrinka in third round

Fritz advances to face 40-year-old Wawrinka after a 6-1, 6-4, 7-6 win; knee feeling positive. Ahead.

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Taylor Fritz, the No. 9 seed, moved through to the third round with a straight-sets victory over Vit Kopriva, firing 15 aces in a 6-1, 6-4, 7-6 (4) result. It was his first straight-set win of the season and a performance that left him broadly satisfied even after he failed to serve out the match on first opportunity.

“I came out playing really, really well. Definitely the kind of like start to a match that I’m looking for. Just felt very calm, in control,” he told press.

“I felt like I was playing aggressive at the right times. When I didn’t have the chance, I was being really solid, not giving away any free points. Just a really good level.

“I’d say my knee has been feeling really good the last couple of days.”

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Fritz arrives at this clash a year on from being knocked out of the 2025 Australian Open in the third round by Gael Monfils. He is also identified in the draft as the 2024 US Open finalist as he prepares to meet Stan Wawrinka, the 40-year-old three-time major champion.

Wawrinka reached the same stage after outlasting qualifier Arthur Gea in a marathon that lasted four hours and 34 minutes. Playing his final season on tour, Wawrinka is the lone wild card in this year’s men’s draw to post a pair of wins. At 40, he is the oldest man to reach this stage of a Grand Slam since a 44-year-old Ken Rosewall at the 1978 Australian Open.

Fritz, who practised with Wawrinka at the season-opening United Cup, praised the Swiss veteran’s resilience and physicality. “His average time on court per match this year has to be something insane because even United Cup he was battling long three-setters every match. It’s so impressive the level and just the physicality he’s still bringing,” the American credited.

“People that compete really well tend to win out over the longer matches. It speaks to how great of a competitor he is.”

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Really, really happy with where it’s at right now. And it’s giving me a lot of hope that I can continue to do my rehab while still playing and it can keep getting better. Taylor Fritz on the progress his knee is showing

Asked whether he envisioned playing into his 40s, Fritz was candid: “No, not at all. I can barely imagine playing in four years from now,” he shared.

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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ATP Masters Miami Open

Lehecka’s aggression topples Fritz in three sets to reach Miami Open quarters

Lehecka leaned into aggression, serving 10 aces and advancing past Taylor Fritz in Miami in QF run.

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Jiri Lehecka leaned on aggression and timely serving to beat Taylor Fritz 6-4, 6-7 (2), 6-2 and advance to the Miami Open quarterfinals. The No. 21 seed served 10 aces, saved all five break points he faced and closed out the victory in just under two and a half hours.

“I kind of felt that in the second set, I gave Taylor a little bit more time to play how he wants to,” the No. 21 seed told Prakash Amritraj. “I wasn’t feeling great, didn’t create that many chances.

“So, that’s why I needed to improve this in the third set, to be more aggressive from the return and finish points at the net.”

Lehecka’s win ended a matchup that Fritz had previously led 4-1 in their head-to-head. The American entered the fourth-round clash as the No. 6 seed but has struggled physically in recent months and had weighed an extended break from the game coming into the Masters 1000 event. Still, Fritz forced a deciding set after winning a second-set tiebreak.

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“Against a player like he is, I really need to bring my ‘A’ game,” said Lehecka, who had never been past the third round in three previous main-draw appearances in Miami. “I need to serve well and I can’t give him any chance to feel comfortable on court. So, that’s what I was trying to do. Of course, it’s impossible to hold it the whole match, but I was close.”

Lehecka will meet Spanish qualifier Martin Landaluce in the last eight. The 20-year-old reached the quarterfinals by winning a third straight set to end No. 32 seed Sebastian Korda’s run, a day after Korda stunned world No. 1 Carlos Alcaraz in three sets.

“It gave me a signal to change something,” Lehecka said of the setback. “I needed to be a little bit more aggressive. Against a guy like him, who is serving incredibly, his return is one of the best on tour. I kind of feel that he can absorb the fast balls easily. At the same time, he can create the power by himself. Sometimes, when you play someone like Taylor, you feel like this guy has answers for everything. That’s what I didn’t want to feel today, and that’s why I was focusing more on the openings of the points. It worked well.”

“You always need to stay in the present, which is so easy to say, but when you’re on the court and the opponent plays well, you’re not feeling great and it’s the biggest challenge!” said Lehecka. “Today, I think my game helped me a little bit to feel good on court.”

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