BNP Paribas Open Masters Player News
Venus deflects on Serena doubles question amid comeback talk at Indian Wells
Venus Williams would not say if she and Serena will play doubles at Indian Wells this year. perhaps.
Venus Williams kept her distance when asked whether she and sister Serena might pair up in doubles, declining to speculate after a three-set defeat to Diane Parry at the BNP Paribas Open. With talk of a Serena return swirling at Indian Wells, Venus offered a single, pointed reply in her post-match media session: “I think you should definitely ask her that.”
The context for the question is straightforward. Serena, a 23-time Grand Slam champion, “evolved” away from tennis in 2022 but re-entered the WADA testing pool last summer, which cleared the way for a potential return to competition as of last month. Novak Djokovic said he hoped to see the younger Williams sister back on court by Wimbledon, a prospect that drew attention around the tournament. Venus, who has long been protective of family matters, chose not to expand on those developments after her loss.
Venus herself resumed competition after a 16-month break to address health issues in 2024. Returning at 45, she became the oldest woman in over two decades to win a match on the WTA Tour. That comeback informed much of the coverage surrounding her appearance at the BNP Paribas Open and the questions about a possible doubles reunion with Serena.
Venus has spoken about her sister more openly on other occasions, notably at the Mubadala Citi DC Open in July, when she praised Serena’s natural talent and the bond they share. “I’m her biggest fan,” she said at the time. “She can take six months off and she clocks it clean. You can’t teach that kind of talent. She’s just so good.
“I mean, I keep saying to my team, ‘The only thing that would make this better is if she was here,’ like we always did everything together, so of course I miss her. But if she comes back, I’m sure she’ll let y’all know.”
ATP BNP Paribas Open Masters
Learner Tien records 50th tour-level win with two tiebreaks at Indian Wells
Learner Tien reached his 50th tour-level victory, beating Adam Walton in two tiebreak sets. Thursday
Learner Tien reached a career milestone in his opening match at the ATP Masters 1000 event in Indian Wells, edging Adam Walton 7-6 (3), 7-6 (8). The 20-year-old Californian claimed his 50th tour-level victory in a match decided by two close tiebreaks.
Tien’s straight-sets win came in a tight encounter where neither player surrendered serve enough to avoid tiebreaks. The result marked an early advance at the Masters 1000 tournament and a notable waypoint in Tien’s developing career.
The achievement carries added historical weight. At 20 years old, Tien is the youngest American man to reach 50 tour-level wins since Andy Roddick, who was 19 when he recorded his 50th at the 2002 Australian Open. That comparison underlines the rapid accumulation of wins by Tien on the main tour.
Tien’s victory over Walton closes another chapter in his progression through the tour-level ranks. The two tiebreak scores, 7-6 (3) and 7-6 (8), reflect the narrow margins that separated the players and the composure Tien showed in decisive moments.
As the tournament continues, Tien’s 50th win will stand as a clear statistical milestone and a personal landmark at an ATP Masters 1000 stop. The result will be recorded among his tour-level accomplishments and noted in the context of recent American men’s performances at similar career stages.
ATP BNP Paribas Open Masters
Djokovic and Tsitsipas pair headline star-studded doubles entries at BNP Paribas Open
Novak Djokovic and Stefanos Tsitsipas pair up for Indian Wells doubles; several headline teams enter
Novak Djokovic and Stefanos Tsitsipas have accepted a wild card to play together in the BNP Paribas Open men’s doubles draw, a notable addition to an already star-studded field. The pair have faced each other 14 times in singles competition and will now share a side in what the event bills as Tennis Paradise. Tsitsipas, the Greek who now resides in Greece, joins Djokovic as one of three high-profile teams awarded wild cards, alongside Reilly Opelka and Jannik Sinner, and Emilio Nava and Ben Shelton.
The men’s doubles event begins on Friday and includes several other headline pairings. Karen Khachanov and Andrey Rublev, Felix Auger-Aliassime and Sebastian Korda, Daniil Medvedev and Learner Tien, and cousins Arthur Rinderknech and Valentin Vacherot are all entered, adding depth and marquee interest to the doubles draw.
Djokovic’s decision to play doubles in Indian Wells carries weight beyond match practice. In his pre-event press conference he pointed to his run to the Australian Open final in January, where he defeated Jannik Sinner in a five-set semifinal before falling to Carlos Alcaraz in the championship match, and said that run showed he “still [has] that edge.”
“My logic is why not keep going as long as I have that fire and flair and quality and also motivation to do that,” he said. Schedule is unclear, as it was in the last kind of couple years. You know, it kind of revolves mostly around Slams, but I kind of pick and choose where I want to play, where I feel like it’s not just from a tennis standpoint but also emotionally, you know, brand-wise, or whatever it is, you know, that inspires me to come.
“And I have my reasons … Indian Wells, as I mentioned, has been always a location that I was really happy to come back to in a tournament that I really love playing. I haven’t had great results and performances in the last 10 years, but in the first 10 years of my career, this was one of the best tournaments.
“That’s all. I mean, I really enjoy the thrill of competition. I enjoy still getting out there in front of the fans and really being competitive. Still No. 3 of the world, so I don’t think it’s too bad, you know, in terms of the ranking and results and performances.”
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Day 3 at Indian Wells: Gauff’s home pressure, Zverev’s desert test, Shelton’s climb
Indian Wells preview Gauff faces home pressure, Zverev adapts in the desert, Shelton seeks more now.
Three matches to watch as the tournament settles into its opening week, each carrying a distinct storyline.
Alexander Zverev arrives with fresh intent and a mixed history at this event. “I like to play golf here,” he said. “Historically I didn’t like to play tennis here.” His 13-9 record at Indian Wells and absence of a semifinal appearance underline that unease, yet Zverev is taking a different approach this season. “But that could change,” he added, pointing to a more aggressive plan. “Take more risks, maybe take some losses like in Acapulco along the way, but play the right way.” His first test comes against Matteo Berrettini, who leads their head-to-head 4-3 and beat Zverev at Wimbledon in 2023 and in Monte Carlo, 7-5 in the third set, in 2025. Berrettini’s tight win over Adrian Mannarino left him cramping and unable to get up for six minutes after a near three-hour match; he produced 26 forehand winners and was 12 for 12 at net. Fitness and who can impose their game will decide this one.
Coco Gauff returns to home courts for the first time in 2026 buoyed by recent results. “The weather is great as usual, so I’m excited to go out there and play.” She cites the U.S. athletes at the Olympics as inspiration and reached the semifinals in Dubai in February. That tournament has recently been elevated to a 1000, but Gauff says she still thinks of Indian Wells as the first event of the year of that stature. Serve pressure will be the story for her here; she has not solved every serving issue but it has not derailed her season as it did last year. Gauff beat 88th-ranked Rakhimova 6-2, 6-3 at the Australian Open, leads her 2-0 and is 11-5 at Indian Wells. Rakhimova arrives having won two qualifying matches and survived a three-set opener with Bianca Andreescu.
Ben Shelton has climbed the draw each year at Indian Wells — second round in 2023, fourth round in 2024, quarterfinals in 2025 — and he may already be eyeing a meeting with Jannik Sinner in the last eight. “It gives you a lot of confidence as a competitor when you’re getting through the tough ones and coming up in the clutch moments,” he said of his performance in Dallas, where he saved match points against Taylor Fritz in the final. “I played my best tennis when my back was against the wall, so I take a lot of confidence from that.” He faces Reilly Opelka, a servebot who can hold serve almost at will; Opelka is ranked 68th, 60 spots below Shelton. Shelton is 2-0 against his countryman, though one match featured two tiebreakers and the other finished 7-5 in the third.
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