ATP Fashion Media
Alcaraz on Vanity Fair Cover: Clay, Couture and the Sinner Rivalry
Alcaraz covers Vanity Fair’s sports issue, blending tennis, fashion and his rivalry with Sinner. Now
Carlos Alcaraz occupies Vanity Fair’s first dedicated global sports issue in a feature that pairs high fashion with the sport’s most discussed rivalry. The profile notes that a wrist injury could keep him out for much of the clay-court season, yet the imagery and story underline how closely the player remains tied to the clay and to tennis culture.
Photographer Ethan James Green shot images of Alcaraz layered in orange clay dust in Miami, styling him in Louis Vuitton, Nike, and Rolex. The feature by José Criales-Unzueta is headlined “King of the Court: Carlos Alcaraz on ‘Living the Dream Life’ and His Rivalry With Jannik Sinner,” and it frames Alcaraz’s commercial presence alongside his on-court achievements.
“What makes Carlos so captivating is the emotion he brings to the game: joy, spontaneity, genuine artistry,” says Pharrell Williams, men’s creative director of Louis Vuitton, in the piece. The story places Alcaraz beside athletes A’ja Wilson and Kylian Mbappé to illustrate sport’s cultural and financial reach.
The profile devotes substantial space to Alcaraz’s dynamic with Jannik Sinner, a pairing already nicknamed “Sincaraz” and presented as the spiritual successor to the Federer, Nadal and Djokovic era. On their relationship, Alcaraz is clear: “We’re showing the world that we can be on court and give our best, and try to do the most possible damage to the other while playing, try to beat each other, and then, off court, just be two guys who get along really well,” he says. “We help each other give our best.”
He adds: “We are fighting for the same goal, but there’s no need to hate each other because we want the same thing,” adding: “When you are competing at this level, having a close friendship is complicated. It can be done. I’m all for it.”
While he accepts flattering comparisons to past greats, Alcaraz concludes that “we’ve reached a point in which comparisons are over.” The Vanity Fair piece captures both the commercial shimmer and the competitive intensity surrounding one of tennis’s leading figures.
1000 ATP Italian Open
Rome quarterfinals preview: Swiatek seeks control in Pegula rematch; Rybakina, Jodar feature
Swiatek and Pegula renew their rivalry in Rome; Rybakina, Svitolina and Jodar also in quarters. May.
This stretch of Rome quarterfinals brings high-level rematches and intriguing first meetings. Iga Swiatek and Jessica Pegula renew a rivalry that once felt lopsided but has tightened in recent months. Both are top-10 staples and among the legitimate Roland Garros contenders entering the clay swing.
Pegula arrives having dispatched Rebeka Masarova 6-0, 6-0 in the third round and then edged Anastasia Potapova earlier in the week. Swiatek has been even more imposing, beating Elisabetta Cocciaretto 6-1, 6-0 and following that with a 6-2, 6-1 victory over Naomi Osaka. Once Swiatek overwhelmed Pegula, notably dropping just one game in the WTA Finals title match in Cancun in 2023, but Pegula has taken the last two meetings in straight sets and narrowed the head-to-head to 6-5.
The matchup is a contrast of styles. Swiatek is a natural puncher who uses heavy topspin from both wings. Pegula is a counter-puncher who hits with flat pace. Pegula’s best path is to keep Swiatek off rhythm and force the Pole to play shorter from the baseline. On clay, however, the surface tends to favor Swiatek’s heavy spin and court positioning. Winner: Swiatek
Elena Rybakina and Elina Svitolina represent another top-level pairing. Rybakina, a Grand Slam champion who has risen to No. 2, has shown the power game that can close out big matches. Svitolina has enjoyed a resurgence, with a title, a 26-7 ledger and a return to the Top 10. Rybakina closed 2025 with a strong WTA Finals run. They have met seven times, Rybakina leading 4-3 and having won the most recent meeting in the Indian Wells semifinals in March. Svitolina has been effective on clay, winning two of three on the surface, and the IW semi was a tight two-set match. Svitolina’s more natural clay game and her 2026 aggression make an upset possible, but Rybakina’s serve and power keep her favored. Winner: Rybakina
The day’s noisier match should be Rafael Jodar versus Luciano Darderi. The 24-year-old Darderi, ranked 20th, will have the home crowd behind him; his first name, “Luuuu-ca”, is highly chantable. Jodar is described as a rising phenom and is 34th-ranked while also referenced as a 19-year-old rookie. Darderi has won a title in Santiago, reached a final in Buenos Aires, made the Australian Open round of 16 and recorded his first Top 10 win in a comeback over Alexander Zverev. This is their first meeting. On talent and upside, Jodar projects to have a gear Darderi may not find. Winner: Jodar
ATP Italian Open Masters
Casper Ruud says he is a better player now than when ranked world No. 2
Ruud insists he is a better player now than when he was world No. 2 and aims to build momentum. late
Casper Ruud moved into the quarterfinals at the Internazionali BNL d’Italia while sitting outside the Top 20, and he believes his game is stronger now than at his career-high ranking.
Four years ago Ruud was one win from the top ranking when he lost the US Open final to Carlos Alcaraz, who went on to become the youngest man in the Open Era to reach No. 1. Ruud finished that tournament at No. 2, his career high, but he says his present level on court is better even if the rankings do not reflect it.
“I’m standing here today with the ranking that I have, which is worse than what I have been … [but] ranking doesn’t always kind of reflect on how you feel on court. That’s OK.”
He acknowledged some disappointing results this season. “I’m also realistic, realizing I lost a few matches that maybe I shouldn’t have lost and didn’t want to lose this year, where maybe I didn’t do the years where I was Top 10, Top 5 in the world,” he added.
Ruud dropped 10 places in the ATP rankings ahead of the Rome fortnight, a slide that followed a quarterfinal exit in his title defense at Madrid. It is the first time he has been outside the Top 20 since the spring of 2021, a year before he reached his first Grand Slam final at Roland Garros in 2022.
Historically a strong performer in Rome, Ruud is a three-time semifinalist at the tournament and has taken down two players ranked above him this week. His Round of 16 victory was a 6-3, 6-1 win over a hampered Lorenzo Musetti, recorded as his second Top 10 win in the past 12 months.
Ruud also spoke about the improving depth of the tour. “Even though I feel like I’ve upped my level since two, three, four years ago, other players have done the same, or even more so,” he said. “They have a better curve than myself. There’s nothing wrong with that. I just have to accept it and keep working hard. Some tournaments some matches will feel better than others.
“I really hope I can have a good result, keep going here in Rome, build some momentum going into the later stage of this tournament, going into Roland Garros, and the remainder of the season.”
1000 ATP Italian Open
Sinner advances to Rome quarters, extends season and Masters streaks
Sinner extended a 26-match 2026 streak and a 31-match Masters 1000 unbeaten run in Rome. Heading on.
Jannik Sinner advanced to the quarterfinals of the Internazionali BNL d’Italia with a 6-2, 6-3 victory over Andrea Pellegrino, closing the all-Italian fourth round in one hour and 29 minutes on Center Court. The top seed’s win halted Pellegrino’s career-best week after the qualifier’s strong run through the event.
Sinner has won 26 consecutive matches this season and remains unbeaten at Masters 1000 tournaments in 2026, extending his streak on this level to 31 matches. His most recent loss came on February 19, a three-set defeat to Jakub Mensik at the Qatar ExxonMobil Open. At the Foro Italico he is yet to drop a set, having surrendered only two games to Alexei Popryin in an earlier round.
Pellegrino reached the main draw as a qualifier, upsetting Martin Landaluce in the final qualifying round before recording wins over No. 15 seed Arthur Fils (via retirement) and No. 20 seed Frances Tiafoe. Unseeded in qualifying and still outside the Top 100, the 29-year-old produced his best week on tour but was unable to match Sinner’s early intensity; Sinner secured a double-break lead in the opening set and closed out the match after breaking at 3-3 in the second.
“I’m very happy for him. He’s been working very hard,” Sinner said of Pellegrino during his on-court interview. “We played seven years ago on a definitely smaller court, so it’s nice. Of course, from an Italian point of view, it’s amazing we have so many Italians, but at the same time it’s a bit unfortunate because it’s the round of 16. But look, it was a very good match, I think, from both of us. Hopefully I’m ready for the quarterfinals.”
The top seed made history last week at the Mutua Madrid Open by becoming the first man to win five Masters 1000 titles in a row, a sequence dating back to the Rolex Paris Masters last fall. With Carlos Alcaraz sidelined by a wrist injury, Sinner is well placed to target titles in Rome and Roland Garros.
“I’m happy with how I’m trying to handle these situations,” Sinner said. “The stages are getting bigger, so I’m happy to put myself in these kinds of positions. A day off will be important for me to try and rest before the quarters.”
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