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Rome day previews: Anisimova’s clay debut, Gauff’s test, Sabalenka vs Krejcikova

Anisimova starts on clay vs Ostapenko; Gauff meets Valentova; Sabalenka faces Krejcikova in Rome…

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Each day, we’ll preview three must-stream matches from the Internazionali BNL d’Italia.

Amanda Anisimova arrives in Rome with expectations that have been enlarged by recent deep runs. She nearly made the final at Roland Garros in 2019; she lost to top seed Aryna Sabalenka in 2025; and in the time since, she had raised the ceiling on her expectations by making the finals at Wimbledon and the US Open. After a series of middling results she split with her coach, and a wrist injury sidelined her in Madrid. Now she will make her debut on dirt in Rome, against a former French Open champ. Anisimova and Ostapenko have met twice, both times on hard courts in Doha: Ostapenko won in three sets in 2022; Anisimova won in straight sets last year. Anisimova is ranked 30 spots higher—No. 6 to No. 36. She has a better serve, can play a little safer when needed, and has much higher expectations for herself than she did even a year ago. The problem for her will be shaking off the rust of two months against a player who won’t give her much rhythm or time to react. Winner: Anisimova

When Valentova won two matches at the Australian Open earlier this year, she looked like a rising prospect. She was just 18. As a junior, she had won Roland Garros and reached the final at the US Open. The Czech, now 19, is 14-9 for the year and has not been out of the second round at a atop-tier event. She seems to have found a groove on clay: she made the final of a 125 in France last week, beat Yulia Putintseva 6-3, 6-2 in her Rome opener on Wednesday, and has cracked the Top 50. Gauff and Valentova have played once, at Roland Garros last year, with the American winning 6-2, 6-4. Coco would go on to win the title. Gauff made the final in Miami last month, but could not close out Linda Noskova in Madrid last week. This will be a useful test for Valentova and for Gauff as she begins her final preparations for her title defense in Paris. Winner: Gauff

You never know exactly where or when you are going to see Barbora Krejcikova. She has won a pair of Slams and been ranked as high as No. 2, even while injuries and layoffs have lengthened. The 30-year-old is returning from a three-month absence due to a thigh injury she suffered in Dubai. She is 4-3 on the year and 1-0 on clay. Aryna Sabalenka won the Sunshine Double and is 26-2 for the year. Sabalenka is 6-1 against Krejcikova; her lone loss came in 2023 in Dubai, and their last three matches have been routine straight-set wins for Sabalenka. Still, Krejcikova knows her way around clay, plays with a disruptive mix of touch and pace, and is capable of producing a hot streak. Sabalenka will not want to end her preparation for Roland Garros with a second-round loss in Rome.

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After Madrid and Rome, Kostyuk and Svitolina Carry Joy and Responsibility into Paris

Two Ukrainian champions, Kostyuk and Svitolina, balanced title joy with the burden of war at clay…

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Marta Kostyuk and Elina Svitolina turned May’s clay swing into a study in contrasting elation and quiet resolve. Kostyuk celebrated her first WTA 1000 in Madrid with an audacious backflip. Two weeks later Svitolina won her third Italian Open, closing out Coco Gauff in the final, flinging her racquet, raising her arms and smiling in disbelief eight years after her last Rome title.

Those scenes of release came with reminders of a harder reality. Both players are from Ukraine and have spoken openly about supporting their country. Even as they climbed new career highs, civilians in Ukraine were being hit by renewed missile strikes. A few minutes after her trophy twirl Svitolina finished her speech this way:

I want to thank all the people back in Ukraine that have been supporting me, watching at night, being in the bomb shelters.

“It’s been really heavy for the past couple of weeks for Ukraine, and I want to thank you for all the support, and I feel all the love.”

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Before Kostyuk’s backflip came her decision to bypass the handshake with Mirra Andreeva, mirroring the wider practice among Ukrainian players toward most Russian and Belarusian opponents. In her victory comments she thanked “all of my opponents” rather than singling out Andreeva. Asked about the long-running conflict, Kostyuk reinforced her stance: “For me, that doesn’t change,” Kostyuk said.

The pair are part of a deep Ukrainian contingent now counting seven players in the Top 100: Svitolina (No. 7), Kostyuk (15), Dayana Yastremska (45), Yulia Starodubtseva (54), Oleksandra Oliynykova (66), Anhelina Kalinina (89) and Daria Snigur (95). Oliynykova drew headlines earlier this year after accusing several tour-mates of “participating in Russian propaganda,” and she has since climbed from No. 96 to a career-high ranking.

On court the women have also improved. Kostyuk’s season form has been strong, and she has addressed mental hurdles that once undermined consistency. “I was living for many years in that state of everyone expecting big results from me,” Kostyuk said in Madrid. “I’ve tried to change that narrative in my head. And that worked, because, you just, you’re more consistent, you just go out there, you do your job, you don’t have like emotional attachment to it. Whether you win or lose, you just keep working and keep becoming a better person and a player, and that’s it.”

Svitolina changed her physical approach and surged through a tough Rome draw, and reflected on it succinctly: “This one is I think one of the toughest draws that I had in a tournament,” Svitolina said. “I’m very proud of the way that I’ve been handling myself and handling the nerves and being consistent.”

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Sorana Cirstea becomes oldest woman to debut in WTA Top 20 after Rome run

At 36, Sorana Cirstea reaches No. 18 after Rome semifinal, the oldest woman to debut in Top 20. Now.

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Sorana Cirstea has reached a new career milestone, entering the WTA Top 20 at No. 18 following her run to the semifinals of the WTA 1000 event in Rome. The Romanian jumped from No. 27 to a career-high ranking after a week that included a third-round victory over Aryna Sabalenka, a win that made her the oldest woman ever to defeat a reigning WTA No. 1.

At 36 years young, Cirstea also set a different record: she is the oldest women’s player to make a Top 20 debut in the WTA rankings, which date back to November 1975. The breakthrough completes a remarkable late-career surge. Over the last 10 months she rose from outside the Top 100 last August to No. 44 by the 2025 year-end rankings, and has continued to climb through 2026.

Cirstea has come close before, having reached No. 21 in both 2013 and 2014 and spending time inside the Top 25 in 2009, 2022, 2023 and 2024. This season has provided clear highlights: her fourth career WTA title, and her first on home soil, came in Cluj-Napoca in February, and last week she recorded the fourth WTA 1000 semifinal appearance of her career in Rome. She is currently No. 11 on the year-to-date race standings.

During the off-season Cirstea announced that this would be the last year of her professional career. Despite that, 2026 is shaping up as the best year of her career. Having missed Roland Garros last year with an ankle injury, she arrives at the clay-court major with no points to defend, an opening to extend the climb she has mounted over the past season.

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The move into the Top 20 caps a string of results that have redefined the back half of Cirstea’s career, blending a long experience of the tour with a sudden run of form on the biggest stages.

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Tien Enters ATP Top 20 After Rome; Jodar Joins Top 30 and Secures Roland Garros Seed

Learner Tien moves into the ATP Top 20 after Rome; Rafael Jodar cracks the Top 30 and earns a seed..

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American Learner Tien has climbed into the ATP Top 20 after reaching the fourth round in Rome. The 20-year-old Californian moved from No. 21 to No. 20 following his best Masters 1000 result on clay. That run marked the first time in his career he has won back-to-back matches on the surface.

Tien’s most notable previous results have come on hard courts, including his first ATP title in Metz last year and another ATP final in Beijing last year. His best Grand Slam showing came with a quarterfinal at the Australian Open earlier this year, and his best Masters 1000 result before Rome was a quarterfinal at Indian Wells earlier this year. He is now finding form on different surfaces and has little to defend for the remainder of the clay season or even the grass season.

On the U.S. leaderboard, Tien is the No. 3-ranked American man behind Top 10 players Ben Shelton (No. 6) and Taylor Fritz (No. 8). Frances Tiafoe (No. 21) and Tommy Paul (No. 26) round out the U.S. men’s Top 5.

Spanish teenager Rafael Jodar also made a significant leap, rising from No. 34 to No. 29 to register his Top 30 debut and clinch a seed for Roland Garros. Jodar has moved from outside the Top 100 to inside the Top 30 in this clay-court season alone. He left Miami with his Top 100 debut and went 15-3 on clay, winning his first ATP title in Marrakech, reaching the semifinals in Barcelona and posting back-to-back quarterfinals in Madrid and Rome.

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The 19-year-old is now the highest-ranked teenager on the ATP list, narrowly ahead of fellow 19-year-old Joao Fonseca at No. 30. They are the only two teenagers in the ATP Top 100. Jodar will be making his career debut at Roland Garros next week.

Two other Rome standouts climbed the rankings: Luciano Darderi rose from No. 20 to No. 16 after reaching his biggest career semifinal, surpassing his prior career-high of No. 18 and guaranteeing a Top 16 seed for Roland Garros; and Casper Ruud jumped from No. 25 to No. 17 after reaching the final in Rome, also securing a Top 16 seed in Paris given No. 2-ranked Carlos Alcaraz and No. 11-ranked Lorenzo Musetti’s injury withdrawals.

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