ATP BNP Paribas Open Masters
Indian Wells Sunday: Shelton vs. Tien, Sinner’s test, and Gauff’s rematch with Eala
Shelton-Tien tests U.S. depth; Sinner vs. Shapovalov; Gauff and Eala set for immediate rematch night
Before Sunday’s play at the BNP Paribas Open we preview three matches likely to draw the most attention.
Ben Shelton vs. Learner Tien — Estimated start: 4:00 p.m. ET
Shelton has been closing in on the top American spot, sitting at No. 8 and a couple hundred points behind Taylor Fritz. His recent form includes a Masters 1000 title in Toronto, Wimbledon and Australian Open quarterfinal runs, and a win over Fritz in the Dallas final. Tien’s rise has been rapid as well; he moved from No. 122 at the start of 2025 to No. 27 today. He is a lefty, three years younger, five inches shorter, serves about 20 MPH slower, and is ranked roughly 20 spots lower. Their only prior meeting came last summer on grass in Mallorca, where Tien returned from a break down in each set to win in straights, hitting winners, finishing points at the net and generally out-striking Shelton. Shelton’s three-set win over Reilly Opelka on Friday included moments when he looked lethargic and reached for his back; he was a few points from defeat until Opelka dropped crucial shots. Shelton can recover, but Tien’s confidence and previous victory make this compelling. Winner: Tien
Jannik Sinner vs. Denis Shapovalov — Estimated start: 5:10 p.m. ET
Shapovalov’s lefty spin and pace should, on paper, feed into Sinner’s two-handed backhand strengths, yet the Canadian has troubled Sinner before. Shapovalov beat Sinner in five sets at the 2021 Australian Open and pushed him in a four-set match at the 2025 US Open, taking the first set 7-5. Shapovalov reached the Dallas semifinals before losing 7-6 in the third to Shelton, and this week he has edged wins over Stefanos Tsitsipas and Tomás Etcheverry. Sinner looked sharp in his opener; if Shapovalov brings his best the match could be tight. Winner: Sinner
Coco Gauff vs. Alexandra Eala — Estimated start: 9:00 p.m. ET
Eala faces Gauff in back-to-back tournaments and for the second time in three matches. Gauff dominated their meeting last month in Dubai, 6-0, 6-2, defending well and imposing aggressive power. Eala survived a late-night slugfest with Dayana Yastremska on Friday and has shown she can trouble top players, including a win over Iga Swiatek in Miami last year. “I’m excited,” she says. “It was a tough match for me last time. I think she played really well. So all I can do is take the learnings that I have from our last match and try to implement that in our next one.”
ATP French Open Grand Slam
Zverev Captures First Grand Slam, Outlasts Flavio Cobolli in Five-Set Roland Garros Final
Zverev won his first Grand Slam at Roland Garros, defeating Flavio Cobolli in a five-set final. 2026
Alexander Zverev finally crossed the major barrier, beating Flavio Cobolli in five sets to claim his first Grand Slam title.
The final swung repeatedly. Zverev led by a set twice and surrendered that advantage on both occasions. In the fourth-set tiebreaker he was within a couple of points of victory before Cobolli prevailed 7-5, sending the match to a decisive fifth set. Zverev said a surprising physical moment helped him find composure.
“What kind of helped me, I was cramping a little bit, because I was emotional,” Zverev said. “I haven’t cramped in probably 10 years. I was very nervous, very kind of tightened up, and then, once I cramped, I relaxed, and that helped me.”
He described his fifth-set tennis succinctly. “I feel like I played better in the fifth set, I played more free, I played more aggressive.” Zverev backed that up with 14 straight first serves to begin the set. He broke Cobolli for 0-2 with a drop shot that set up a winning pass, and he saved two break points at 3-0, the second via an all-court defensive sequence that ended with a missed Cobolli overhead.
When Cobolli’s final smash went awry, Zverev collapsed to the court and the milestone was complete. The moment carried extra weight because of painful history on this court. “This court had some of my best memories, and also some of my biggest heartbreaks,” Zverev said about Chatrier. “Laying on the floor, with seven broken ligaments and two fractured bones.” That injury in the 2022 semifinal against Rafael Nadal had ended his season.
Zverev acknowledged the wider context, including the absence of Carlos Alcaraz, Jannik Sinner and Novak Djokovic, and the urgency it created. “If I lost this final, I maybe would have never won a Slam,” he said. “Now that I’ve won this, it changes. I feel like I’ve done it. Maybe I can enjoy these finals a bit more, play my best tennis.”
Reactions to the victory are mixed. Supporters point to his friendships on tour, his refusal to engage in gamesmanship, his play while managing juvenile diabetes and his persistence after late-round defeats. Critics note two allegations of domestic abuse: an ATP inquiry closed with no disciplinary action because of “insufficient evidence,” and a separate matter resolved in Germany with a 200,000-euro settlement fine paid without admission of guilt. Zverev denies both allegations.
ATP French Open Grand Slam
Zverev Claims First Grand Slam, Outlasts Cobolli in Five-Set Roland Garros Final
Zverev wins first Grand Slam, beating Flavio Cobolli in five sets to complete tour-level sweep. 2026
Alexander Zverev secured the first Grand Slam title of his career by outlasting Flavio Cobolli in a dramatic five-set final at Roland Garros, winning 6-1, 4-6, 6-4, 6-7 (5), 6-1 on Sunday. The victory ended a run of near-misses for Zverev at the majors and gave him the one trophy that had eluded him to this point.
This was the fourth major final of Zverev’s career. He had been runner-up on three previous occasions: at the US Open in 2020, when he lost to Dominic Thiem in five sets; at Roland Garros in 2024, when he fell to Carlos Alcaraz in five sets; and at the Australian Open in 2025, when he was defeated by Jannik Sinner in straight sets. Entering this match he risked becoming only the third man in the Open Era to lose his first four major finals, joining Ivan Lendl and Andy Murray, but the outcome means his name will not go on that list.
Beyond the personal milestone of a first major, the result completes another notable career achievement for Zverev. With the Roland Garros title he has now won tour-level events at every category: ATP 250, ATP 500, ATP Masters 1000, ATP Finals, the Olympics and a Grand Slam. That sweep places him in rare company; he is the fourth man ever to claim tour-level titles at every level, joining Andre Agassi, Novak Djokovic and Andy Murray.
For context about other greats, Federer was only missing the Olympics from that list, and Nadal was only missing the ATP Finals. Zverev’s triumph at Roland Garros both closes a chapter of major final frustration and adds a defining line to a career that now includes success at every tier of the modern tour.
ATP French Open Grand Slam
Luis Guto Miguel makes history with Roland Garros junior boys’ crown
Luis Guto Miguel won the junior boys’ singles title at Roland Garros, a first for Brazil. Unseen feat
Seventeen-year-old Luis Guto Miguel completed a landmark week at Roland Garros, claiming the junior boys’ singles title and becoming the first Brazilian to win a junior singles trophy at the clay-court major. The top seed closed out the final on Court Simonne-Mathieu Saturday, defeating Michael Antonius, 6-3, 6-4.
“I think Brazil are living a good moment again.”
Miguel reflected on the length of the work behind the achievement. “I think it means a lot, for sure. It’s a lot of hard work me and my team have put, not only this week, but many, many years ago,” he told press. “I think everything worked right now, but just really happy. Enjoying the moment, but keep humble, because we have a lot to do yet.”
He credited the crowd for feeding his energy during the event. “I’m the kind of player that (likes) to play with the crowd. In Brazil, especially because we are most(ly) a football country, the crowd is always supporting a lot. I like to play with that, so I just want to thank everyone that cheered for me today.
“Yeah, it was a big atmosphere. I will never forget this day.”
Miguel said he had drawn inspiration from other recent moments at the tournament. Just over a week earlier, he saw countryman Joao Fonseca rally from two sets down to topple Novak Djokovic, Miguel’s idol, on his way to a first major quarterfinal appearance.
“Brazil have amazing history here in French Open,” he reflected. “What Guga have made, Fonseca made this week, and now I think I did a little bit more for Brazil right now.”
The title on the Paris clay represents a notable milestone for Brazilian junior tennis and caps a week in which Miguel combined seeding, composure and crowd support to secure a straight-sets victory in the final.
-
1000Italian OpenMasters1 month agoSwiatek recovered from Madrid illness, praises Francisco Roig as she targets fourth Rome title
-
ATPFrench OpenGrand Slam1 month agoZverev Set to Be Roland Garros No. 2 Seed After Djokovic’s Rome Defeat
-
ATPFrench OpenGrand Slam2 weeks agoRoland Garros 2026 Preview: Why Jannik Sinner Arrives as the Heavy Favorite
