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ATP ATP 500 Nexo Dallas Open

How ATP 500s Carved Their Own Space: No Byes, Bigger Pay and Stronger Fields

ATP 500s have found identity: bigger fields, no byes, appearance fees and stronger draws. More buzz.

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Ben Shelton’s words after the Dallas Open final were simple and revealing: “This is one of my favorite atmospheres I ever played in,” he said after winning the title at the Dallas Open on Sunday. The 23-year-old has already met the game’s highest moments — Novak Djokovic in a US Open semifinal, Jannik Sinner on Centre Court, Carlos Alcaraz in Court Philippe Chatrier and appearances in Davis Cup, Laver Cup and the NCAA championships — yet he singled out the Ford Center in Frisco, Texas, a 12,000-seat arena, for its energy. Fans packed the house for each of his five wins, and the runner-up, Taylor Fritz, echoed the praise.

That enthusiasm matters because it points to a broader change: ATP 500 tournaments are finding a distinct identity. Positioned between Grand Slams and ATP 250s, 500s now offer a clearer alternative to the 1000s. During the Big 3 era the 500s often felt closer to a lower tier; the Slams and 1000s were the fixed targets for top players, with the 1000s mandatory for two-week preparation and exposure. But structural changes on tour have reshuffled priorities.

The One Vision plan of 2023 extended most 1000s from nine to 12 days. Initially that looked like a further tilt toward the top events, yet it also sharpened what a 500 can be. The 500s retain 32-player draws with no byes, requiring champions to win five matches in seven days, and ensuring top players often begin competition early in the week. The ATP increased the number of 500 events from 13 to 16, with Dallas and Doha added in 2025, and boosted the 500-level bonus pool to $3.07 million to split among the top six finishers.

Appearance fees, which Slams and 1000s cannot offer, have also changed the mix: “Alcaraz and Sinner were each paid $1.2 to show up in Doha,” the draft notes. The tour mandated Top 30 players to play five 500s in 2025; that requirement fell to four in 2026, including one after the US Open, giving players choice and creating variety in draws.

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The expanded 1000s have faced criticism for reducing rest and scheduling flexibility. Still, the push to create more compelling events stands. As one line put it, “bigger is better,” and the altered landscape has handed the 500s a clearer role.

ATP ATP 500 Rio de Janeiro

Etcheverry Reaches Rio Semifinals, Records 100th Tour-Level Victory

Etcheverry reached the Rio semifinals and notched his 100th tour-level win against Faria. A milestone.

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Tomas Martin Etcheverry moved into the Rio de Janeiro semifinals with a 7-6 (4), 6-4 win over Jaime Faria, a victory that also marked the 100th tour-level win of his career.

At No. 51, the former Roland Garros quarterfinalist is the highest-ranked player and the only seed remaining in the ATP 500 draw. With his results this week, Etcheverry will jump past Sebastian Baez to become the new Argentinian No. 2 when the new ATP rankings are released on Monday, after Cerundolo. He is the sixth Argentinian man born in 1990 or later to reach 100 tour-level wins and just the second Argentine born in 1999 or later to do so, after Sebastian Baez.

Faria, a lucky loser who reached the Rio quarterfinals for a second straight year, threatened early. He held five break points in the opening set—one with Etcheverry serving at 2-all, two at 3-all and two at 4-all—but failed to convert. Etcheverry escaped a 71-minute first set in a tie-break and then carried the momentum into the second set.

Both players held serve through the first eight games of set two with no break points. Etcheverry produced the match’s first break for 5-4, then served out the contest, finishing the point with a crosscourt forehand that Faria hit into the net. The match statistics reflected the turning moments: Etcheverry was 1/2 on break points while Faria was 0/5.

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Etcheverry is now two wins from his first ATP title. He has reached three ATP finals, all on clay, finishing runner-up twice in 2023 at Santiago and Houston and once in 2024 at Lyon, losing those finals to Nicolas Jarry, Frances Tiafoe and Giovanni Mpetshi Perricard respectively.

Awaiting Etcheverry in the semifinals is Vit Kopriva, who earlier defeated Juan Manuel Cerundolo 6-4, 6-4. While Etcheverry is the only seed left in Rio, the bottom half of the draw still features notable names, including former Top 10 player Matteo Berrettini, a former No. 6 now ranked No. 57, who played his quarterfinal later in the day against Ignacio Buse.

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ATP ATP 500 Rio de Janeiro

Etcheverry Records 100th Tour-Level Win, Advances to Rio Semifinals

Etcheverry notched his 100th tour-level win in Rio, beating Jaime Faria to reach the semifinals. Now.

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Tomas Martin Etcheverry continued his run in Rio de Janeiro with a straight-sets victory over Jaime Faria, 7-6 (4), 6-4, to reach the semifinals and register the 100th tour-level win of his career.

The No. 51-ranked Argentine is the highest-ranked player and the only seed remaining in the ATP 500 draw. With his result this week, Etcheverry will also move past Sebastian Baez to become the new Argentinian No. 2 when the new ATP rankings are released on Monday, after Cerundolo.

Faria, a lucky loser who reached the quarterfinals in Rio for the second straight year, threatened early. He held five break points in the first set—one at 2-all, two at 3-all and two at 4-all—but did not convert. Etcheverry escaped a 71-minute opening set in a tie-break and then closed out the second set by breaking for 5-4 and serving out the match, finishing with a decisive crosscourt forehand that Faria put into the net.

The break-point numbers underlined the match: Etcheverry was 1/2 on break points while Faria was 0/5.

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Etcheverry is now two wins away from claiming his first ATP title. He has previously reached three ATP finals, all on clay, and finished runner-up at Santiago and Houston in 2023 and at Lyon in 2024. His three final defeats came to Nicolas Jarry, Frances Tiafoe and Giovanni Mpetshi Perricard respectively.

Waiting for Etcheverry in the semifinals will be Vit Kopriva, who earlier beat Juan Manuel Cerundolo 6-4, 6-4 to advance. While Etcheverry is the only seed left in Rio, the bottom half of the draw still contains notable names, including former Top 10 player Matteo Berrettini, a former No. 6 now ranked No. 57, who was scheduled to play Ignacio Buse in the other quarterfinal later in the day.

Etcheverry’s milestone places him among Argentine men born in 1990 or later to reach 100 tour-level wins and makes him the second Argentine born in 1999 or later to hit that mark, after Sebastian Baez.

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ATP ATP 250 Qatar ExxonMobil Open

Alcaraz Beats Rublev to Reach Doha Final, Extends 2026 Winning Run to 11

Alcaraz defeated Rublev to reach the Qatar ExxonMobil Open final, running his record to 11-0 2026..

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Carlos Alcaraz dismantled defending champion Andrey Rublev in straight sets, 7-6 (3), 6-4, to reach the final of the Qatar ExxonMobil Open. The world No. 1 moved to 11-0 in 2026 and advanced to his second final of the season in a two hours and two minutes contest.

Alcaraz, 22, returned to competition for the first time since completing the Career Grand Slam at the Australian Open and produced a composed performance on Center Court. He took the opening set in a tiebreak and, after failing to serve out the match, secured the victory by breaking one game later.

Rublev, the No. 5 seed who lifted the Doha trophy in 2025, has beaten Alcaraz previously but has now dropped four straight matches to the Spaniard despite two close sets on Friday.

Hopes of a first “Sincaraz” final of 2026 ended earlier when No. 2 seed Jannik Sinner was upset in the quarterfinals by Jakub Mensik. Mensik will meet Arthur Fils in the other semifinal, setting up the opponent for the Doha final.

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The victory leaves Alcaraz poised to extend his points advantage over Sinner to at least 3080, with the margin set to widen further should he complete a 12-0 run by lifting the Doha title.

Earlier in the week Alcaraz rallied from a set down in a three-set comeback against No. 7 seed Karen Khachanov. That match included a flashpoint when Alcaraz criticised the ATP time violation rules after receiving a warning for exceeding the 25 seconds allotted between points.

On Friday he tightened his game when it mattered, converting the key moments in the tiebreak and the decisive break to move into the final and keep his unbeaten start to the season intact.

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