1000 Madrid Open
Ann Li advances as Iga Swiatek retires in Madrid with illness ending match
Ann Li led Iga Swiatek 7-6, 2-6, 3-0 when Swiatek retired, giving Li her best WTA 1000 result. Match
Ann Li moved through at the Mutua Madrid Open after Iga Swiatek was unable to complete their match, retiring while trailing in the deciding set. Li led the 2024 champion 7-6 (4), 2-6, 3-0 when the encounter ended.
Swiatek, the world No. 4, sought to regain control after splitting the first two sets but fell behind early in the third when a crosscourt forehand sailed wide and she lost serve. She then requested the trainer and took a seat, burying her head in her hands. A doctor joined the on-court consultation and provided medication before Swiatek resumed play.
After the medical attention, Li consolidated the break to open a 3-0 lead. The Pole stopped down 0-30 on her next service game and then called it down 0-3, 0-30 in their decider. The retirement handed Li a notable victory at a WTA 1000 event.
The result gave Li her first Top 10 win since the 2022 Miami Open, where she defeated Anett Kontaveit. For Swiatek, the withdrawal brings an abrupt halt to her run in Madrid and delays her attempts to end a clay-court title drought that stretches back to the 2024 Roland Garros. She will now wait until the Internazionali BNL d’Italia in Rome to resume that pursuit.
The match was marked by the sequence of medical attention and the brief return to court before the eventual retirement. Li capitalized on the situation and advanced, securing what the tournament notes as her best WTA 1000 result to date.
© 2026 Robert Prange
1000 ATP Madrid Open
Gauff wins in Madrid after falling ill on court and finishing strong
Gauff battled illness and vomited on court before rallying to beat Sorana Cirstea in Madrid. on clay
Coco Gauff advanced to the fourth round of the Mutua Madrid Open after a testing third-round win over Sorana Cirstea, a match marked by an on-court illness. The defending Roland Garros champion appeared sluggish and fell behind by a set and a break before the incident at 4-4 in the second set.
At that moment, after breaking Cirstea’s serve, Gauff sprinted to the side of the court to get sick and received a medical timeout while a tournament doctor checked her vitals. From there she recovered to win nine of the final 11 games and closed out a 4-6, 7-5, 6-1 victory in a two hour, 21-minute contest.
“I was just trying to finish the match, and have one point turn into another,” Gauff said in her on-court interview after the two hour, 21-minute match. “I’m just going to try to push through … It was a weird feeling today. I don’t know how I got through it.”
Gauff, who retired from a match against Alexandra Eala at the BNP Paribas Open last month with an arm injury, the second mid-match retirement of her career, said she was determined not to stop again in the middle of a match. “When I actually threw up on the court, that was like a little bit embarrassing,” Gauff later told reporters, as per the WTA website. “Then after that first game and the second, I was like that took everything out of me. I’m someone who doesn’t like to pull out [of matches]. I don’t like to do that unless I really feel like I have no other options.
“So the plan was to always just try to finish, even if it ended up with me, just playing just to get through it.”
Illness has been a recurring subplot at the combined ATP and WTA 1000 clay-court event. Four players have been forced out, with Madison Keys and Marin Cilic giving second-round opponents walkovers and Cilic citing food poisoning. 2022 Madrid champion Iga Swiatek retired from her match against Ann Li after feeling unwell. “I’m sure I’ll be fine in a couple of days, but I had zero energy,” Swiatek said. “I just felt really bad physically and yesterday, even worse. So I thought maybe today it’s gonna be better, but maybe it was, but not enough to play a match.” “The symptoms are not something you want to hear about,” she added.
1000 ATP Madrid Open
Bernabeu hosts clay practice court as Madrid Open stars train inside stadium
Bernabeu converted into a clay practice court for the Mutua Madrid Open, hosting star rallies. This.
Jannik Sinner and Iga Swiatek spent part of their practice week at an unconventional training site in Madrid: the Santiago Bernabeu Stadium. The venue was converted into a clay-court training surface for the ATP and WTA 1000 event, and players were able to use the club’s locker rooms while working there.
Real Madrid players Thibault Courtois, Jude Bellingham and Linda Caicedo joined 22-time major champion Rafael Nadal for on-court rallies with Sinner and Swiatek on Thursday. One memorable moment saw Nadal’s three-year-old son, Rafael Jr., pick up a racquet and hit a few balls as Sinner watched with a grin.
“Spectacular,” Nadal said of the experience. “You can’t ask for much more. Also, when this unique stadium was built it was designed for things like this to happen. Being able to play tennis in this place is something unique, and it will go down in history.
“It’s a venue that left an impression on me, and has a special place in sport.”
The Bernabeu seats 83,000 and completed a major renovation in 2024. The overhaul added a retractable roof and a retractable pitch system that allows the natural grass field to be divided into trays and stored underground in a climate-controlled environment. That infrastructure made the rapid conversion possible: the clay court was installed in less than two days, with work starting immediately after Real Madrid’s 2-1 home win over Deportivo Alaves on Tuesday evening and finishing in time for Thursday’s sessions.
Since reopening, the Bernabeu has hosted events including an official NFL game and stops on Taylor Swift’s Eras Tour. The tournament called the staging at the stadium “an historic step” that reaffirms Madrid’s capacity to host innovative initiatives with global reach. “The presence of a clay court in the Bernabeu not only meets an operational need for players, who will have a new training space fully integrated into the tournament dynamic, but also projects a powerful image of Madrid as a capital capable of reinventing its major sporting venues and connecting them with one another.”
Several players used the facility during the week, but Sinner indicated he plans to return to training at the Caja Magica for the remainder of the event. “No, no, no, no. I want to practice here,” he said after his opening win over Benjamin Bonzi. “But yesterday was a very interesting day. Seeing a court there in the Bernabéu was amazing. It was (my) first time going to the stadium…
“For me, it was nice to get (to know) Courtois and Bellingham in a personal point of view. They are incredibly humble, and at the top of the game for so many years already—two different players, obviously, and different ages.”
1000 ATP Madrid Open
Ruud’s Madrid return: grandmother Liv brings cousin Oscar to watch the title defense
Grandmother Liv brought 10-year-old Oscar to Madrid for the tournament, continuing a family ritual..
Casper Ruud’s connection to the Mutua Madrid Open has come full circle. His 2025 title win sent the Norwegian back to the place where a childhood 10th birthday left a lasting impression, a memory he described after his final-round victory over Jack Draper last May.
“I said I wanted to watch tennis, and Madrid was a good option. I have relatives who lived in Madrid, so we stayed with them and came for two days to watch the tennis,” he recalled.
“I remember I got Novak’s autograph, and I watched Rafa, Roger and Soderling. I also saw Tommy Haas practicing. I loved every minute watching the players play, with my grandmother. She has a photo of me and you can see the excitement on my face. It’s incredible, it’s a dream come true to have this trophy here.”
Ruud began his title defense on Saturday in emphatic fashion, defeating Jaume Munar 6-0, 6-1 in 66 minutes. Two guests of honor were in his box as he advanced with a dominant performance.
Keeping the family tradition alive, grandmother Liv returned to the Spanish capital this year and brought along her grandson Oscar for the boy’s 10th birthday experience. Casper first visited the Caja Mágica as a 10-year-old; Oscar followed that same choice for his own milestone.
Casper in 2009; Oscar with Liv in 2026.
Oscar’s day included meetings with several high-profile players. Among those he encountered were 2021 US Open champion Daniil Medvedev, Argentine No. 1 Francisco Cerundolo and Felix Auger-Aliassime. The Canadian is ranked No. 5, right behind Djokovic.
The visit doubled as a family moment and a glimpse at the tour for an aspiring young player. As Ruud continues his defence, the tournament has once again provided personal memories that tie the present to a formative childhood trip.
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