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Italian Open Masters

Swiatek seeks equilibrium on clay as Roig joins her coaching team

Swiatek seeks the calm that once defined her clay dominance as she mixes form, coaching and joy. now

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Iga Swiatek had stretches of vintage dominance in her Rome match with Caty McNally, racing to a 6-1 first set and opening the second 3-1 before the contest shifted. Her early intensity and control were evident, but the match repeatedly veered: break opportunities came and went, a costly double fault arrived at a pivotal moment, and McNally forced a second-set tiebreak. The final score was 6-1, 6-7 (5), 6-3 as Swiatek found enough consistency late to advance.

“I’m happy at the end of the match I was solid and I used the right balls to attack, but was also patient enough to stay in the rally,” she said after the win. That patience ultimately decided the contest, though the swinginess underlined the wider issue Swiatek has wrestled with this season.

McNally has a history of testing Swiatek. The American defeated her in the Roland Garros girls’ event and was the only player to take a set from her at Wimbledon last year, a background that explained her confidence on court.

The inconsistencies are part of a larger arc. Between 2022 and 2024 clay produced Swiatek’s best results, including a 21-3 record at this event and three Rome titles. In 2025 she surrendered her clay crowns in Madrid, Rome and Paris and lost the No. 1 ranking. She arrived at grass with less to defend, focused on improving rather than on protecting points, and emerged from that season holding the Wimbledon trophy.

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Now the question is whether she can carry the lighter mindset from grass back to clay this spring. Recent results have been mixed: a loss to Mirra Andreeva in Stuttgart, illness in Madrid, and the up-and-down performance against McNally in Rome.

Off court, Swiatek has added Francisco Roig to her team. Roig previously worked with Rafael Nadal, and the Spaniard’s experience on clay is well known. On the alliance with Roig, Swiatek said, “I think we have the same vision of how I should play. He’s helping me to achieve that.”

Her outlook is plain and steady. “I love being here,” she says of Rome. “These are honestly the most exciting tournaments for me, also in terms of spending time off the court. I’m just enjoying life.”

She added: “I’ve been trying some different options in practices, which is great, because I wasn’t exactly comfortable with how I played a couple months back. This feels more natural and more solid and I would say kind of disciplined.”

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“Honestly the most important thing for me is that I’m enjoying playing. I enjoy practicing. Every practice for me makes sense. It feels like a process and it feels like every practice I learn something new.”

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ATP Italian Open Masters

Djokovic, hampered by illness, upset by Dino Prizmic in Rome opener

Novak Djokovic, visibly ill, lost 2-6, 6-2, 6-4 to Dino Prizmic in Rome; match lasted 2:15. on clay.

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Novak Djokovic’s return to the Italian Open ended abruptly as the 24-time Grand Slam champion fell 2-6, 6-2, 6-4 to Dino Prizmic in his opening match. The contest, played on Court 1 and delayed by rain, lasted two hours and 15 minutes.

Djokovic was last at the Foro Italico in 2024, when he suffered a freak head injury due to a fan’s dropped water bottle, and had been off the tour since a fourth-round exit at the BNP Paribas Open. Competing two weeks shy of his 39th birthday and chasing a 25th major, he arrived in Rome after coming up short at the Australian Open, where he defeated Jannik Sinner in a five-set semifinal but finished runner-up to Carlos Alcaraz. He has played just one tournament since then heading into the clay season.

“I wanted to be back on the tour earlier, but unfortunately the injury prevented me to do that,” he said in his pre-tournament press conference, “so I had to wait a bit more and progressively improve the state of the body and obviously get ready for Roma, the city and the tournament that I truly love, and I had great success in for many years.

“The ultimate goal on this surface is Roland Garros and trying to get ready to play my best tennis there. But nevertheless I do want to do well here, so I do have a lower expectations.”

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As the No. 3 seed Djokovic earned a second-round spot but ran into the 20-year-old Croatian who had pushed him to four sets in their only previous meeting at the 2024 Australian Open. Prizmic reached the main draw by winning two qualifying matches, had scored his first Top 10 victory over Ben Shelton last week at the Mutua Madrid Open and advanced to face Djokovic after a straight-sets win over Marton Fucsovics on Wednesday.

Djokovic broke twice to take the opening set, but was visibly ill in the second, winning just six points in the first four games. Prizmic closed out the second set, then secured the decisive break in the fifth game of the third. Djokovic served to stay in the match at 5-3, but Prizmic delivered an ace to seal the victory, the biggest win of his young career and a match that matched his best Masters 1000 result.

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1000 ATP Italian Open

Rafa Jodar reflects on Madrid test with Sinner as Rome campaign unfolds

Rafa Jodar reflects on his Madrid run and Rome debut after a rapid rise in the clay season in 2026.

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Rafa Jodar has sprinted into the clay season spotlight at 19, climbing roughly 70 places in the rankings after claiming his first tour title and reaching a first Masters 1000 quarterfinal. That breakthrough run came in Madrid, where he met world No. 1 Jannik Sinner in a quarterfinal that stretched the youngster and produced praise from his opponent.

Jodar said of that encounter after his opening-round win at the Internazionali BNL d’Italia, “I learned a lot.” He added, “Playing against one of the best players in the world is always very special. I think there were moments in the match where I competed against him and I was at that level.

“But obviously, if you want to beat these guys, you need to be at that level for two hours, three hours—especially as the match gets longer. You have to be there and you can’t drop the level because they’re always going to be there.”

The Spaniard produced notable victories in Madrid, including wins over No. 5 seed Alex de Minaur and No. 27 seed Joao Fonseca, a sequence that helped push him into the Top 40 for the first time. He described the week in Madrid as memorable and credited a strong connection with the crowd. “It was one of the best tournaments, I could say, of the year,” Jodar told Prakash Amritraj. “I knew it was going to be very special but I didn’t expect it to be that special! I really connected with the crowd, with the people who came to support me. I think it was great. I played great matches and it was a great tournament. But the season is very long and so you just have to be there, recharge your mind, and try to be there again for the next week.”

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Making his main-draw debut at the Foro Italico, Jodar is seeded at a Masters for the first time and moved closer to a potential Roland Garros seeding after an opening straight-sets victory over Nuno Borges. He will next face Matteo Arnaldi, who upset Alex de Minaur in three sets.

Jodar also highlighted the role of his support team, notably his father. “It’s a great connection, and it’s great to have him in the good but more importantly in the bad moments,” Jodar said. “He’s always there when I need him. He’s always trying to help me and that’s very important. I’m super grateful he’s able to travel with me to all the tournaments and that he’s there because I know it’s not easy to be with the same person for a long time. But I think he’s doing a great job and I’m super grateful he’s in my corner.”

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Billie Jean King Cup Italian Open Masters

Bencic sharpens serve as Purina partnership donates 1,000 meals per ace

Purina gives 1,000 meals per ace via Bencic; she is practicing serve and began her Rome campaign…

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Belinda Bencic has added a new incentive to her service practice: every ace now fuels a cause. In March the Swiss announced a partnership with Purina Switzerland to promote the Pro Plan line, and as part of that deal Purina will donate 1,000 meals to animals in need for every ace she hits.

The initiative recently expanded at a Billie Jean King Cup Finals qualifier to include her teammates, and Bencic discussed the collaboration after winning her opening match at the Internazionali BNL d’Italia on Thursday.

“I’m very motivated to hit aces. I think it’s just a great project together, with a partnership that I really believe in,” Bencic told Tennis Channel’s Prakash Amritraj. “I love dogs, I love cats. I would love to have an animal shelter once I stop playing.

“I’m super proud and I’m practicing my serve a lot to do ace! It’s more tough here but in Madrid, I did quite well.”

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The No. 12 seed opened her Rome campaign by defeating Bianca Andreescu 6-4, 6-1, a follow-up to a fourth-round showing at the Mutua Madrid Open. Bencic has also balanced tournament life with family responsibilities; her two-year-old daughter Bella is not at this event and is staying with her grandparents.

“I miss her so much, but I’m getting like hundreds of videos per day. I miss her but it’s also nice to go out to restaurants, sleep in, and have a lot of time,” she laughed.

The partnership gives Bencic an added reason to focus on a traditionally high-payoff shot. By tying aces to meals for animals, the agreement with Purina Switzerland has become a tangible motivator on court and an opportunity to involve teammates and supporters off court. Photo: © 2026 Robert Prange

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