250 ATP Delray Beach Open
Learner Tien rallies past Frances Tiafoe to reach Delray Beach semifinal
Learner Tien rallied past Frances Tiafoe 7-6, 3-6, 7-5 at Delray Beach to reach his first semifinal.
Learner Tien has become a player opponents find hard to close out at the Delray Beach Open. After surviving a scare in the round of 16 when Miomir Kecmanovic stood two points from victory, Tien edged the defending champion in a final-set tiebreaker to advance.
Twenty-four hours later the 20-year-old left-hander delivered another late flourish, beating Frances Tiafoe 7-6 (5), 3-6, 7-5. The fourth seed produced a sequence of timely defenses and late pressure that turned the match in his favor.
Tien credited a personal observation in the stands for extra motivation during the decisive moments. “I saw my mom sitting up there when I was down 4-5 and I know if I lost, she was going to leave tomorrow,” he shared. “I was kinda thinking that early in the match, at like 2-3 in the third maybe. But it really hit home when it was 4-5 and I could kind of see the end.”
The match featured several momentum swings. Tien saved a pair of set points on Tiafoe’s serve in the 10th game of the opening set and regrouped after Tiafoe produced a re-break for 6-5. In the third set he saved three break points to avoid falling further behind and then shifted the match with a decisive run.
Tien closed the match with a four-game streak that decided the outcome, winning 16 of the final 18 points and finishing by breaking Tiafoe at love. That run sent him into his first semifinal of the season.
Reflecting on his mindset when trailing early in the decider, Tien added: “I got down an early break, wasn’t looking too great. I prayed. I said, ‘God I trust your plan for this match.’ I just went out and competed,” he said.
250 ATP Nexo Dallas Open
Shelton rallies from the brink to defeat Fritz in Dallas final
Shelton recovered from a slow start, saved three championship points and edged Fritz in Dallas. fans
Ben Shelton staged a dramatic finish to claim the Dallas title, saving three championship points and producing the decisive winners when it mattered most. Taylor Fritz controlled more of the match overall and was steadier across three sets, but Shelton delivered the spectacular shots on the crucial points.
Fritz opened strongly, breaking early and taking the first set 6-3 while winning his first 28 first-serve points. The quick indoor courts kept break chances scarce and the crowd split its support between the two Americans, who entered the week ranked No. 1 and No. 2 in the United States and No. 7 and No. 9 in the world.
“Fritz was playing very good tennis and I was struggling a lot with what he was throwing at me,” Shelton said. “I tried to be a competitor through and through.” Shelton clawed back in the second set as his groundstrokes began to match his serve. He produced an inside-out forehand winner at 2-2 and then a sequence of forehand, backhand and running forehand pass to break and level the match.
The decider featured long, fast rallies and heavy hitting from both players. Each man reached deep into his arsenal; together they produced 30 aces and a combined winner-to-error ratio that reflected aggressive play. Fritz answered Shelton’s early break with his own big moments, but Shelton broke again and served out a tense finish.
“Once I get a set, I feel pretty confident,” Shelton said later. “Once I’m able to sink my teeth in and feel like I have some sort of rhythm, I just start to loosen up and find my level.” At 6-5 Fritz saved match points, but on the third championship point a semi-shanked Shelton forehand landed just short and the point belonged to Shelton.
“It was a fun match to be a part of, up until the end,” Taylor Fritz
Shelton acknowledged the scale of the win: “I thank God, because I needed something supernatural to end up winning this tournament with all the holes that I was in,” he said. “This is one my favorite atmospheres I ever played in.” The result highlights Shelton’s capacity to elevate his game on the biggest points and marks a signature victory over his countryman.
250 Player News Qatar TotalEnergies Open
Muchova breaks 2019 title drought with Doha triumph
Muchova ended a title drought since 2019, beating Victoria Mboko 6-4, 7-5 to win Doha Tonight Burger
Karolina Muchova ended a long wait for a second WTA title by defeating Victoria Mboko 6-4, 7-5 to win the Qatar TotalEnergies Open. The victory carried extra weight: the world No. 19 had not lifted a trophy since the 2019 Korea Open and had suffered four straight runner-up finishes in the interim.
“I would say I nearly forgot the winning feeling, because it’s been really quite a while,” Muchova confessed after defeating Victoria Mboko, 6-4, 7-5 in the final. “To get reminded of it, actually, I was pretty nervous before the match. I’m like, ‘Okay, how am I going to deal with it, how am I going to manage it.’ And then when you actually make it, and I dealt with that pressure I think very good in today’s match, I was just relieved, and the intensity of the feeling of winning, it’s just so nice.”
Famed for a natural, free-flowing style, Muchova has repeatedly reached the latter stages of major events since her lone title in 2019. Her resume includes back-to-back US Open semifinals in 2023 and 2024 and a run to the 2023 Roland Garros final. Those deep runs have come alongside periods affected by injury that sidelined her for extended stretches and complicated attempts to add trophies.
“Last time I played [a final] I really thought I played good that week, and then I lost pretty easily,” she said of a 2024 China Open defeat to Coco Gauff. “So I’m like, then you question yourself a little bit. Like, ‘Can I do it?’ Because, you know, obviously I hear it all around. Everyone’s like saying I only have one title.
“It’s not that I would take it personally, or that it would describe my tennis or me as a person, but I really wanted to prove that to myself that I still have it in me and that I can win. So, I would say I was just very proud how I handled myself today.”
Fit to begin the 2026 season, Muchova is projected to move to No. 11 in the WTA rankings after Doha, three spots shy of her career-high of No. 8. With the Dubai Duty Free Tennis Championships beginning next week she allowed only a brief pause for celebration. “In tennis everything goes so fast,” said Muchova. “I think sometimes we forget to stop and reflect on the good weeks, or small wins, big wins. My next tournament starts tomorrow! So, it’s really tough. But I would just like to stop for a little bit and enjoy it with my team, and just go somewhere tonight with them and have a good time and maybe reflect a little more.”
That celebration will feature at least one thing in particular.
250 ATP Buenos Aires
Fonseca on Buenos Aires setback and persistent flatback: “My body wasn’t helping me”
Fonseca lost his Buenos Aires title defense as chronic flatback syndrome limited his movement. 2026.
One year after his first major ATP breakthrough — winning the Buenos Aires title at 18 — Joao Fonseca returned to the same clay event as defending champion and No. 3 seed and suffered an early exit. He lost in the opening round to Alejandro Tabilo, 6-3, 3-6, 7-5, a defeat that extended a three-match losing streak and renewed questions about his physical readiness.
“If I say no, I’d be lying, so yes, I certainly felt a bit more pressure,” Fonseca said after the match. “I felt tense from the beginning of the match. I tried to bring intensity, motivation, eagerness, even sought support from the crowd, but it wasn’t my day. There was a lack of conviction and confidence…”
“I tried everything to motivate myself,” he added. “I was pissed off with my legs, which weren’t moving the way they needed to. My body wasn’t helping me hit the right shots I wanted.”
A lower back injury troubled Fonseca at the end of last season and affected the start of 2026. He withdrew from his scheduled Australian Open tune-ups in Brisbane and Adelaide, then fell in the first round in Melbourne to Eliot Spizzirri in four sets.
“I was born with a back problem and suffered a stress fracture five years ago,” he told Brazilian press after pulling out from Brisbane. “Some days I feel more pain than others. It’s an injury that never fully disappears, but one I have to learn to manage day to day.
“Over the last few days, I’ve felt like I was improving a bit, but it’s hard to say if I’ll be at 100 percent.”
According to his team, the chronic condition is called lumbar hypolordosis, also known as flat back syndrome, in which the lower spine has lost its natural curve. “João has a straightened spine and suffered a stress fracture five years ago, when he was still a juvenile. Thus, the lower back is the most sensitive area of his body and, because he is a high-performance athlete, it requires constant care,” says a statement provided to GE (Globo Sports). “Soon, João will be back to the tournaments, 100 percent recovered. The mentality of the team is always to preserve the athlete’s health, aiming for a long-term career.”
Medical notes in the report say flatback can reduce mobility and increase the risk of ongoing pain and secondary injuries. Treatment commonly involves physical therapy, anti-inflammatory medication, injections and pain management aimed at posture and symptom control.
Fonseca now turns his focus to the ATP 500 Rio Open on home soil. “They say ‘Joao is going to be the next Guga, the next Alcaraz’, I’m writing my own story and doing everything at my own pace,” Fonseca said. “What I can do on my part is work really hard on my mentality and my physique.”
-
ATPAustralian OpenGrand Slam2 months agoAustralian Open announces record A$111.5 million prize pool for 2026
-
Analytics & StatsATPPlayer News2 months agoDavidovich Fokina’s 2025: Progress, Near Misses and the Elusive First Title
-
ATPMastersPlayer News2 months agoQuiet Climb: Francisco Cerúndolo’s move from steady veteran to central contender
