Italian Open Masters
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…
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.
1000 Italian Open Masters
Swiatek recovered from Madrid illness, praises Francisco Roig as she targets fourth Rome title
Swiatek recovered from Madrid illness and praises Francisco Roig’s practices ahead of Rome bid. 2026
Iga Swiatek said she has put a difficult Madrid episode behind her and is feeling fully fit as she prepares to chase a fourth Internazionali BNL d’Italia crown in six seasons.
The world No. 3, who retired in the third set of her third-round match with Ann Li after a suspected bout of food poisoning at the Mutua Madrid Open, remained in Madrid to recover before travelling to Rome. The 24-year-old said the illness left her without energy in the immediate lead-up to the match.
“It was really, like, sh–ty, literally (laughter). So yeah, I was completely off, like, day before the match. The day I played also I was not good, like no energy at all,” she told reporters.
“Honestly, day after it was a bit better, but still I don’t think I would be able to play normal. But in two days I was already fine. I recovered. I had some time to stay there and not really travel because I don’t think it’s safe to travel when you’re so, like, fragile.”
Swiatek reported that she has returned to full fitness in training at the Foro Italico. Alongside the aim of claiming a fourth Rome title in six seasons, she said she is also seeking a first title with her new coach, Francisco Roig. The WTA 1000 in Rome is her third tournament working with Roig after the pair debuted their partnership in Stuttgart last month.
Swiatek described changes she has been making in practice under Roig and the importance of enjoying the process.
“I have been trying some different options on practices, which is great, because I wasn’t exactly comfortable with how I played couple months back. This feels more natural and more solid and I would say kind of disciplined,” she said.
“Sometimes still I tend to come back to old habits, so I think I will need some time to exactly always fully automatically do what Francis wants me to do. I think it’s going pretty well. Like, honestly the most important thing for me is that I’m enjoying playing. Every practice for me makes sense. It feels like a process and it feels like every practice I learn something new. So it’s great.”
1000 ATP Italian Open
Rome Day Preview: Blockx, Pliskova and Prizmic in the spotlight
Blockx’s rise, Pliskova’s comeback bid and Prizmic’s breakout headline Rome’s opening matchups..
Alexander Blockx has emerged as a compelling presence on tour this spring. The 21-year-old from Belgium reached the semifinals in Madrid last week and now sits at No. 36 in the rankings. That rise has not been enough to earn a seed in Rome, though he should make the cut at the Slams. In Rome he faces a different sort of challenge: a younger opponent. Cina, a 19-year-old from Palermo who reached as high as No. 4 in the juniors, will have local support. As a pro, however, Cina has not been ranked higher than No. 183. Blockx’s profile fits the modern top-level ATP player: a 6’4 frame, a strong serve, a heavy topspin forehand and a two-handed backhand. Winner: Blockx
Karolina Pliskova’s return to the later rounds of a WTA 1000 event was unexpected at the start of the year. The 34-year-old finished 2025 ranked outside the Top 1000 and had not advanced past the second round at a major since 2023. Last week in Madrid she looked more like the player who once held No. 1 in the world, making the quarters and coming within a set of the semifinals. Now at No. 130, Pliskova has momentum and tournament history on her side: she won this event in 2019 and reached the final in 2020 and 2021. She opens against Bouzas Maneiro, a fiery 23-year-old from Spain ranked 50th. They have never played each other. Winner: Pliskova
Dino Prizmic is another name that surfaced during Madrid. The 20-year-old from Croatia, listed at 6’2, plays with noticeable grit and physicality. He recorded eye-opening wins over Matteo Berrettini and Ben Shelton last week in Madrid, moves to a career-high No. 79 and is now a player to watch as the clay season progresses. His rise this spring has been rapid and memorable.
1000 ATP Italian Open
Rome Preview: Sinner’s choice, WTA turbulence and Djokovic’s tentative return
Sinner returns to Rome as top seed; WTA chaos continues while Djokovic plots a wary clay comeback.
The quick move from Madrid to Rome represents more than a change of venue. The two Masters-level events arrive within 24 hours of one another, and the Foro Italico presents a very different atmosphere from the Caja Magica. The surface carries the same name, but fans, arenas, altitude and weather make Rome its own test.
Jannik Sinner enters as the top seed, coming off an extraordinary run in 2026. After missing four Masters 1000s in 2025 — Indian Wells, Miami, Monte Carlo and Madrid — he has won all of those events so far in 2026 while dropping just two sets. That sequence leaves him with a scheduling dilemma: rest before Roland Garros or play his national event and risk added wear. Rest would mean three weeks without a match before Paris; playing preserves match rhythm. He has chosen to play and is scheduled to meet Arthur Fils in the round of 16.
Sinner’s potential path to the title: 2R: Michelsen | 3R: Mensik | 4R: Fils | QF: Shelton | SF: Medvedev | F: Zverev
The WTA field arrives on the heels of an unsettled Madrid. For the first three months of 2026 the rankings held, but the last two weeks produced surprise results. Aryna Sabalenka was the only one of the top group to reach the quarters in Madrid. Marta Kostyuk won her first 1000 title, Mirra Andreeva reached the final and Hailey Baptiste beat Paolini, Bencic and Sabalenka. That raises the question: will Rome restore order or continue the upheaval? Last year Jasmine Paolini produced a home-court Cinderella run to the title, but Sabalenka, Rybakina, Iga Swiatek and Coco Gauff have recent history of deep runs in Rome.
Sabalenka: 2R: Krejcikova | 3R: Cirstea | 4R: Noskova | QF: Anisimova | SF: Gauff
Gauff: 2R: Putintseva or Valentova | 3R: Raducanu | 4R: Jovic | QF: Andreeva | SF: Sabalenka
Swiatek: 2R: Kasatkina or McNally | 3R: Navarro | 4R: Osaka | QF: Pegula or Muchova | SF: Rybakina
Rybakina: 2R: Sakkari | 3R: Wang Xinyu | 4R: Kostyuk | QF: Svitolina | SF: Swiatek
Novak Djokovic’s presence is notable. He has played just two tournaments this year, the Australian Open and Indian Wells, and after his long goodbye at Roland Garros last year some expected him to skip the clay swing. He is seeded third, a six-time Rome champion with a career record at the Foro Italico of 68-12, and he has never lost in the opening round. He has not played a match on clay in 11 months and is about to turn 39, but he landed in a manageable section of the draw.
Djokovic’s path to the final: 2R: Fucsovics | 3R: Humbert | 4R: Khachanov | QF: Musetti | SF: Zverev
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