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  • Carlos Alcaraz clinches sensational achievement as he downs Jannik Sinner for maiden Italian Open crown

    Carlos Alcaraz delivered a stunning performance to earn a statement victory over Jannik Sinner in the final of the 2025 Italian Open.

    The Spanish star prevailed 7-6(5), 6-1 against world No 1 Sinner on Centre Court at the Foro Italico to claim his maiden title in Rome.

    In a fiercely contested and serve-dominated opening set, Alcaraz saved two set points serving at 5-6, 15-40 to force a tiebreak.

    Alcaraz took control of the tiebreak by racing to a 3-0 lead after hitting consecutive aces and he converted his second chance to win the set with a perfectly constructed point.

    The tiebreak proved critical as Alcaraz dominated the second set as he broke a fading Sinner twice en route to sealing a resounding win.

    With his triumph, Alcaraz ended Sinner’s 26-match winning streak. The Italian had not lost since his defeat to Alcaraz in the 2024 China Open final in October.

    The four-time Grand Slam champion has now won four straight matches against Sinner and leads the head-to-head 7-4.

    Sinner’s run to the Rome final was an impressive effort in his first tournament since he won his third major at the Australian Open in January. The 23-year-old was sidelined by a three-month suspension for failed doping tests.

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    Alcaraz will climb above Alexander Zverev into the world No 2 position when the ATP Rankings update next week.

    Having already won the French Open and the Masters events in Monte Carlo and Madrid, Alcaraz’s Italian Open crown means he has now secured every big title available on clay.

    The 22-year-old has become just the fifth player to win three different Masters 1000 tournaments on clay courts, joining Marcelo Rios, Gustavo Kuerten, Rafael Nadal and Novak Djokovic.

    Rios and Kuerten both collected titles in Monte Carlo, Rome and Hamburg — the latter of which was a clay-court Masters tournament before Madrid switched to clay in 2009.

    Nadal secured clay Masters titles in Monte Carlo, Madrid, Rome and Hamburg, while Djokovic has won each of the three current Masters events played on the surface.

    Alcaraz is also the fifth-youngest player to win 10 ATP Tour titles on clay after Mats Wilander, Nadal, Kent Carlsson and Bjorn Borg

    The Spaniard has claimed 19 titles overall, and his Rome win added to an excellent 2025 clay campaign in which he had already triumphed in Monte Carlo and reached the Barcelona Open final.

    READ NEXT: 2025 French Open: Dates and draw as Sinner and Sabalenka lead event ahead of Alcaraz and Swiatek

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  • What Carlos Alcaraz said about Novak Djokovic playing until the 2028 Olympics

    Carlos Alcaraz has shared his thoughts on the prospect of Novak Djokovic competing until the 2028 Olympics Games.

    Djokovic defeated Alcaraz 7-6(3), 7-6(2) in a thrilling and high-level gold medal match at the 2024 Olympics in Paris.

    The Serbian revealed after that historic triumph that he wanted to defend his Olympic title at the 2028 Los Angeles Games.

    Earlier this month, Lacoste CEO Thierry Guibert reaffirmed this sentiment by proclaiming that Djokovic intends to play “at least” until the next Olympics.

    Djokovic, who will turn 38 on May 22, will be 41 at the 2028 Olympics.

    After reaching the final of the 2025 Italian Open, Alcaraz was asked about Djokovic’s Olympic goal.

    “Well, I mean, his body is feeling like he’s 25 years old. It is crazy how he maintain the good level going into the matches. The level is another thing,” the 22-year-old Spaniard said.

    “He can struggle, or he’s been struggling in terms of level. But I think physically he’s in a really good shape. Is depend on him. I’m pretty sure if his goal is to play another Olympic Games, I think he’s able to do it.

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    “Of course, I think he take care a lot of his body, of everything just to be at his hundred percent. If he’s got that, he can do it for sure.

    “I could be more than happy to see him more years on tour playing, sharing good moments, sharing good tournaments with him. I could be more than happy if that happens.”

    The four-time Grand Slam champion also addressed the evolution of his game and the importance of being solid when required.

    “Yeah, I mean, sometimes is difficult because sometimes when I see the ball coming, a lot of things come to my mind,” Alcaraz explained. “Sometimes is difficult to choose the right decision.

    “But I’m trying to improve that part of my game, as well, trying not to think too much and do the right things always, even though if it is not the brilliant shot or the brilliant decision.

    “Depends on the day, as well. Days like today with a lot of wind, it’s always difficult to hit the ball clear. You have to go to the smart decision just trying to be patient, trying to wait your chances.

    “If the points or the rally goes to 10, 12, 13 shots, you have to be ready for that battle. You have to be ready for that and try to wait until you can go aggressively. Sometimes is difficult, but I think today I did it pretty well.”

    READ NEXT: Carlos Alcaraz has been set ‘absurd’ Grand Slam targets claims former British No 1

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  • Jannik Sinner ‘sending a message’ to his rivals

    Jannik Sinner’s rivals have been warned “he wants to eat everyone alive” with Justine Henin stating his form could be good news or bad news for the rest of the ATP Tour.

    The naysayers who thought the world No 1 would struggle with match fitness following his three-month ban have been proved wrong as Sinner has been in imperious form at the Italian Open.

    After winning the Australian Open final against Alexander Zverev on January 26, the three-time Grand Slam winner was sidelined from February 9 until May 4 as he was suspended following his two positive tests for the banned substance Clostebol.

    The 23-year-old missed several big events- including the Indian Wells Open, Miami Open, Monte Carlo Masters and Madrid Open – giving the rest of the Tour hope he would be sluggish upon his return.

    But Sinner returned with a bang as he defeated Mariano Navone, Jesper de Jong, Francisco Cerúndolo and Casper Ruud in straight sets to reach the semi-finals in Rome.

    He produced one of his most dominant displays against Ruud – fresh from winning the Madrid Open – as he demolished the sixth seed 6-0, 6-1 before dropping his first set in the last four against Tommy Paul.

    The American won the opening set 6-1, but Sinner bounced back to win 1-6, 6-0, 6-3 to reach his eight consecutive final. He is now unbeaten in his last 26 matches and former world No 1 Henin fears for the Italian’s rivals.

    “He’s clearly worked incredibly hard physically in recent weeks. He’s coming in so fresh,” the seven-time Grand Slam winner told TNT Sport.

    “What’s incredible is finding his bearings so quickly and in this way. He’s picking up on everything. He’s picked up on all the signals, everything he could improve on, with great intelligence, since his first match in Rome.

    “The message he’s sending is that he wants to eat everyone alive. It’s going to do everyone good… or it’s going to scare everyone.”

    Sinner will face Alcaraz in the final and their Spaniard leads their head-to-head rivalry 6-4, having won their last three meetings, including the 2024 China Open final last October.

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    It’s the final everyone wants to see and Sinner feels it will be a good test for him.

    “We know each other quite well now. It’s always special to share the court with him. I feel like we both know how to play against each other a little bit, so we have to be prepared tactically. Of course, small things are going to be changed. This, yes,” he said.

    “But it’s just a great test for me to see where I am. It’s great for me to play against Carlos before the two Grand Slams. That for me is good because I see where I have to improve, what I have to do better.

    “Hopefully it’s going to be a good match. I feel like this is the most important part. Yeah, but in any case what’s coming out Sunday, a great tournament from my side, making such a run here, it feels good.”

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  • Points and money earned by Paolini, Gauff, Swiatek, Raducanu, Eala at Italian Open

    Jasmine Paolini ended Italy’s 40-year wait for another home women’s winner at the Italian Open as she beat Coco Gauff to lift the trophy and with it came a big points tally and handy prize winner’s cheque.

    Finalists Paolini and Gauff scored rankings boosts ahead of the French Open while 2024 champion Iga Swiatek was effectively -935 after her early exit from the clay-court tournament.

    But it was a day for the home fans at Foro Italico as Paolini defeated her American opponent 6–4, 6–2 to win her second WTA 1000 title and third career title.

    She is only the second Italian woman after Raffaella Reggi in 1985 to win the tournament in the Open Era. It is also her first title since she lifted the Dubai Tennis Championships trophy in February 2024 with her other tournament win coming at the 2021 Slovenia Open.

    But how many points and how much money did Paolini and her fellow competitors earn in Rome?

    WTA Points Earned In Rome

    WTA 1000 winners earn 1,000 points, but from the previous year are deducted from their rankings. There is good news for Paolini as she lost in the second round in 2024 so she only dropped 10 points and will add a massive 990 points to her WTA Rankings tally.

    With the win, Paolini will move up to fourth in the rankings, moving ahead of Swiatek.

    Gauff reached the semi-final last year so had 390 points to defend, resulting in her adding 260 (650-390) to her total. Her move up to No 2 in the rankings was confirmed before the final.

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    Zheng Qinwen and Peyton Stearns were the semi-finalists and the former added 175 while the American didn’t compete in Rome last year, but will leave with 363 points as she had 27 points from the 2024 WTA 125 Saint Malo event. Stearns will climb to a new career-high No 28 with her last-four run.

    Quarter-finalists earn 215 points and Aryna Sabalenka, Mirra Andreeva, Diana Shnaider and Elina Svitolina exited at this stage, but Sabalenka left with -435 as she finished runner-up last year.

    Andreeva (205), Shnaider (85) and Svitolina (95) added some points.

    What about the other high-profile players?

    Emma Raducanu enjoyed her best-ever run at the Italian Open as she reached the fourth round before losing to Gauff. She gets the full complement of 120 points as she didn’t play last year.

    Defending champion Swiatek lost a round earlier and was thus unable to defend her points from last year so will be -935 (1,000-65) when the rankings are updated on Monday, dropping to fifth.

    Rising star Alex Eala lost in the first round, but didn’t earn any points as she was defending points from a 2024 ITF event.

    WTA Prize Money Earned In Rome

    As per the official WTA website, the winners earned €877,390 (roughly $1m) so she will almost double her 2025 prize money earnings as she was on $1,217,537 before the tournament. Her career total is $9,765,349.

    Gauff – 19th in the all-time prize-money earning list, secured a cheque of €456,935 ($525,475) while Zheng and Stearns went home with €240,380 ($276,437).

    Sabalenka, Andreeva, Shnaider and Svitolina are €124,700 ($143,405) richer after the tournament while Raducanu and the other fourth-round losers earned €66,110 ($76,027).

    Swiatek, who has earned more than $35m during her playing career, secured a cheque of €38,313 ($44,060) while Eala received €13,150 ($15,123).

    The post Points and money earned by Paolini, Gauff, Swiatek, Raducanu, Eala at Italian Open appeared first on Tennis365.

  • Jasmine Paolini wins her 2nd WTA 1000 title, dominating Coco Gauff to lift the Italian Open trophy

    Jasmine Paolini produced a stunning performance against Coco Gauff to win the 2025 Italian Open, the second WTA 1000 title of her career.

    The Italian looked simply unplayable for much of the match, victorious 6-4, 6-2 over the world No 3 in just 90 minutes.

    The result will have been extra sweet for Paolini, becoming the first Italian singles champion in Rome in 40 years, just the second in the Open Era (after Raffaella Reggi).

    “I don’t have the words, it’s been an incredible two weeks,” exclaimed Paolini.

    “I was trying to just focus on the match, trying to repeat to myself that you have you stay there for every ball, but, at the beginning, I was feeling great, the best match that I’ve played here.

    “It was a great final, I’m really happy about the win, in front of the home crowd, my family, my team, and the president, so it’s amazing.”

    Coming into the match, it was the American who led the head-to-head 2-1, but Paolini managed to notch a win during their latest clay-court meeting in Stuttgart.

    “Against Coco, I had to raise the level compared to the past few matches,” the Italian said.

    “She’s coming for another final so she was playing good, but you can do it. You have to stay on the court and do whatever you think is right, and just keep going.

    “This is something special, to win here in Rome is special. I was coming to watch this tournament with my family, with my father, my father was there, and I don’t know if he was crying, but it’s a dream.”

    Paolini is the first Italian female singles player to win at least one title at WTA 1000 level or above on multiple surfaces, having won the title in Dubai in 2024 with a three-set victory over Anna Kalinskaya.

    “I have had a great week,” Gauff said, during the trophy presentation.

    “I’ve been here so many times, made the semis twice, so I was happy to get to the final. Jasmine, you’re an amazing person and player, and congratulations on this amazing achievement.

    “It’s always tough playing you.”

    Despite her defeat in the final, the American will rise to the world No 2 spot, matching her career-best ranking which she first achieved in June 2024.

    Whilst the climb means that she cannot face Aryna Sabalenka before the final in Paris, Gauff has made clear that the only goal in her mind – when it comes to ranking – is the world No 1 spot.

    “No, I’m going to be honest, it’s [the ranking] not important to me, honestly,” Gauff admitted, during the Madrid Masters

    “I mean, the only number that would mean a lot to me is 1 at this point. But, yeah, anything anywhere else is just, it’s just a number.

    “So, yeah, but, I mean, obviously it’s a reward for the work that I’m doing and the consistency that I’m showing, but it’s not something that I think about or have a goal to reach.”

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    As a result of the title lift, Paolini secured a top-4 seeding for Roland Garros – leapfrogging defending champion Iga Swiatek.

    However, Paolini is not finished yet in Rome, as she will seek to defend her doubles title alongside Sara Errani against Veronika Kudermetova and Elise Mertens in the women’s doubles showpiece match on Sunday.

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  • Who will Emma Raducanu face in WTA Strasbourg opener? World No 15 Daria Kasatkina

    Emma Raducanu is playing some of the best clay-court tennis of her career in 2025, also showing a return to form at the Miami Open in March with a run to the quarter-finals.

    Her next event is scheduled to be at the WTA event in Strasbourg, taking place from May 18 – May 24.

    Raducanu will face either Danielle Collins or Sofia Kenin in the second round, however, before she can look forward to that encounter, she must get past world No 15 Daria Kasatkina.

    Here is all that you need to know about the Australian.

    Career Highlights

    Kasatkina is a former world No 8, a position which she first achieved in October 2022.

    Her best result at Grand Slam level was a semi-final showing at Roland Garros that same year, reaching the last eight at the US Open in 2018.

    As a junior, she was ranked as highly as world No 3 and claimed the title at the 2014 girls’ singles event at Roland Garros.

    Overall, Kasatkina has won eight titles, most recenly doing so in October 2024 at the Ningbo Open – a WTA 500 event.

    2025 so far

    The former world No 8 began her season by participating in three Australian events, making the second round in Brisbane, the quarter-final in Adelaide, and the fourth round at the Australian Open.

    From there, Kastatkina lost in her opening match in Abu Dhabi and Dubai, reaching the round of 16 at the Qatar Open.

    At Indian Wells, she got a solid victory over Sofa Kenin, before losing her next match, as well as her opening encounter at the Miami Open.

    On the clay, Kasatkina has managed to win two out of the five singles matches that she has contested.

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    Head-to-head

    Unfortunately for Raducanu, it is Kasatkina who has won all three of their matches.

    Their first encounter arrived at the Ostrava Open in 2022, when the Australian was in the best form of her life – claiming the match 7-5, 6-4.

    Nearly two years later, they met at the Rothesay International event, with Raducanu being completely outplayed 6-2, 6-2.

    Their most recent match occurred at the Korea Open in September 2024, where the Brit retired from the match after losing the first set 6-1 – due to an ongoing foot issue.

    After the match, Kasatkina said: “I feel sorry for Emma. It’s a pity to get injured, especially in the deeper stages of the tournament. I wish her a speedy recovery.”

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  • WTA Strasbourg draw: Raducanu gets brutal opener as Pegula, Navarro, Badosa, Rybakina headline

    The draw for the WTA tournament in Strasbourg is out, and Emma Raducanu features in one of several intriguing early matchups in a strong field.

    The clay-court 500 event, which will be held in the week before the French Open from May 18 to 24, features six top 20 players — including three top 10 stars.

    Madison Keys was the 2024 champion, but she chose not to play this year. The draw includes 28 players, including four wildcards: Jessica Pegula, Raducanu, Diane Parry and Alize Cornet.

    The seeded players are Pegula (1), Emma Navarro (2), Paula Badosa (3), Elena Rybakina (4), Daria Kasatkina (6), Barbora Krejcikova (7) and Liudmila Samsonova (8).

    Elina Svitolina was the fifth seed, but her place will be taken by a lucky loser as she pulled out after the draw was made. Ekaterina Alexandrova and Olga Danilovic have also withdrawn.

    The top four seeds receive a bye to the second round, while players seeded between five to eight will enter in the opening round.

    Top half

    Pegula, Badosa, Kasatkina and Samsonova are the four seeded players in a stacked top half of the draw.

    Top seed Pegula will face Anna Kalinskaya or a qualifier in her opening match, while she is projected to meet Kasatkina in the quarter-finals.

    Raducanu has been handed a brutal draw as she will play Kasatkina — against whom she holds a 0-3 record — in the first round. Whoever prevails will take on the winner of a spicy all-American matchup between Danielle Collins and Sofia Kenin.

    No 3 seed Paula Badosa has not played since the Miami Open in March due to her persistent back injury, and the Spaniard is set to play Alize Cornet or a qualifier in her opener. Eighth seed Samsonova is projected to meet Badosa in the last eight.

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    Bottom half

    Second seed Emma Navarro will face the winner of an opening round clash between Magdalena Frech and Beatriz Haddad Maia.

    With Svitolina withdrawing, world No 23 Clara Tauson is the highest-ranked player Navarro could face in the quarter-finals.

    No 4 seed Rybakina will begin her campaign against Wang Xinyu, and she is on a quarter-final collision course with fellow Wimbledon champion Barbora Krejcikova.

    Krejcikova, the seventh seed, is set to play her first event of the 2025 season, having not featured since the WTA Finals in November due to injury.

    Projected quarter-finals

    Pegula (1) vs. Kasatkina (6)

    Badosa (3) vs. Samsonova (8)

    Rybakina (4) vs. Krejcikova (7)

    Navarro (2) vs. Tauson (unseeded)

    READ NEXT: Emma Raducanu receives major boost as she makes key Wimbledon coach decision

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  • Hamburg Open draw: Alexander Zverev and Frances Tiafoe lead the way in final push before French Open

    In the final week before Roland Garros gets underway, the ninth ATP 500 of 2025 – at the Hamburg Open – will host an array of top players looking for a last-minute clay preparation.

    At last year’s edition, Arthur Fils defeated Alexander Zverev 6-3, 3-6, 7-6(1) to lift the second ATP title of his career.

    However, the Hamburg Open has seen various high-profile withdrawals within the last few weeks – including world No 1 Jannik Sinner, Holger Rune, Lorenzo Musetti, Stefanos Tsitsipas, Ugo Humbert, and Tommy Paul.

    Many of these withdrawals are undoubtedly due to the event’s newly-found position within the ATP Tour’s calendar, having previously been held between Wimbledon and the first hard-court events in North America.

    Despite this, the entry list means that the event promises to be an exciting prospect, with Alexander Zverev, Frances Tiafoe, Andrey Rublev, and Francisco Cerundolo leading the way as the top four seeds.

    Top Half

    Current world No 3 Zverev took a wildcard into the event after a string of disappointing results over the clay-court season, losing in the second round, fourth round, and quarterfinals of the three Masters 1000s, respectively.

    The German will open his Hamburg campaign against a qualifier or a lucky loser, before likely facing Alexandre Muller in the third round. Zverev has faced the Frenchman on two occasions, winning all five of their sets, including a 6-4, 6-1 victory at the ATP 250 event in Munich earlier in 2025.

    Sixth seed Felix Auger-Aliassime – a possible last-eight opponent for Zverev – opens against the experienced clay courter Daniel Altmaier. The Canadian has claimed multiple titles this season, but has struggled as of late to string wins together, failing to reach to go beyond the third round of any Masters 1000.

    Most recently, Auger-Aliassime withdrew from Rome due to a lower back injury. Should the Canadian get through Altmaier, he would meet either Alexander Bublik or  Giovanni Mpetshi Perricard before – potentially – facing Zverev.

    Third seed Andrey Rublev leads the opposing section within the top half, with Brandon Nakashima, Jan-Lennard Struff, and Lucas Darderi also featuring.

    Should both the German and the Russian make the projected semi-final, neither would feel overly confident in gaining the victory. Zverev leads the head-to-head 7-3, but it is Rublev who claimed their most recent clay-court meeting – with both struggling for confidence, recently.

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    Bottom Half

    Tiafoe, as the second seed, leads the bottom half of the Hamburg Open draw. The American has had mixed clay-court results this season, reaching the final of Houston and the fourth round of the Madrid Masters, but falling in his opening match in Barcelona and Rome.

    Nevertheless, he will open against Yunchaokete Bu – an opponent who he has never met. In the third round, Tiafoe is projected to face either Roberto Bautista Agut or Marcos Giron, with Alejandro Davidovich Fokina, Gael Monfils, and Flavio Cobolli as possible quarter-final opponents.

    Fourth seed Francisco Cerundolo is one of the most in-form players of the clay-court season, reaching multiple semi-finals and putting on a good showing against Jannik Sinner in Rome.

    He opens against Pedro Martinez, before likely encountering Jiri Lehecka in the second round. From there, it is an all-Argentinian affair, with Sebastian Baez, Tomas Etcheverry, Camilo Ugo Carabelli, and Francisco Comesana being his four potential quarter-final opponents

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  • Geneva Open 2025 draw: Novak Djokovic and Taylor Fritz learn their fates at ATP 250 event

    The draw for the 2025 Geneva Open has been made, and Novak Djokovic and Taylor Fritz have learned their potential opponents.

    The clay-court ATP 250 tournament, which will run from May 18 to 24, features 28 players, including three wildcards and four qualifiers.

    Casper Ruud was the defending champion, but he has withdrawn. Grigor Dimitrov, Tallon Griekspoor, Denis Shapovalov, Jordan Thompson and Lorenzo Sonego have also pulled out.

    Five players in the top 25 of the ATP Rankings will feature, including three top 20 stars.

    Fritz and Djokovic, who are ranked fourth and sixth respectively, headline the draw as the two top 10 stars in action.

    The other seeded players are Tomas Machac, Karen Khachanov, Alexei Popyrin, Hubert Hurkacz, Alex Michelsen and Matteo Arnaldi.

    The top four seeds receive a bye to the second round, while players seeded from five to eight will enter in the opening round.

    Novak Djokovic’s draw

    As the No 2 seed, Djokovic has landed in the bottom half, and he looks set to meet some potentially dangerous opponents.

    The Serbian will face either world No 50 Zizou Bergs or 134th-ranked Marton Fucsovics — a former world No 31 — in the second round.

    Djokovic could then play world No 37 and eighth seed Matteo Arnaldi, who he lost 3-6, 4-6 to at the Madrid Masters in his most recent match. Talented Hungarian Fabian Marozsan, who is ranked 61st, is another possible last eight rival.

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    In the semi-finals, Djokovic is projected to meet third seed and world No 20 Machac — who he was beaten by at the same stage at last year’s Geneva Open.

    World No 25 Alexei Popyrin, who stunned Djokovic at the 2024 US Open, is the other seeded player the tennis icon could meet in the last four, while Nicolas Jarry and Jacob Fearnley are also in this section.

    If Djokovic progresses to the final, the seeded players he could face are Fritz, Khachanov, Hurkacz and Michelsen.

    Taylor Fritz’s draw

    Fritz, who is the No 1 seed, will begin his Geneva campaign against either Jaume Munar or Quentin Halys.

    The American is projected to face Hurkacz in the last eight, with Miomir Kecmanovic another potential opponent.

    In the last four, Fritz could meet Khachanov or Michelsen in terms of seeded players, while Nuno Borges, Kei Nishikori and Learner Tien could also feature.

    Djokovic, Machac, Popyrin and Arnaldi are the seeded players who may await Fritz in the championship match.

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  • Sinner, Musetti, Rune lead big name Hamburg Open withdrawals as one huge wildcard confirmed

    The 2025 Hamburg Open has been rocked by the late withdrawals of a host of big name players, with world No 1 Jannik Sinner the most notable.

    The ATP 500 tournament, which will begin on May 18, looked set for a strong field as the initial entry list featured nine of the current ATP top 20, including three top 10 stars.

    However, the event’s new calendar position in the week before the French Open has proven damaging to its player field. The Hamburg Open was previously staged in July after Wimbledon.

    As well as Sinner, Lorenzo Musetti and Holger Rune — who are ranked ninth and 10th respectively — have pull out.

    Tommy Paul and Stefanos Tsitsipas are the other top 20 stars to withdraw, while 22nd-ranked Sebastian Korda and world No 23 Ugo Humbert have also chosen not to compete.

    Sinner, Musetti and Paul all pulled out after reaching the semi-finals of the Italian Open.

    Despite the considerable blows of the withdrawals, the tournament has been handed one big boost.

    Alexander Zverev, the world No 2 and Germany’s leading tennis star, has accepted the A+ wildcard to play in Hamburg. A+ wildcards are often reserved for high-ranked players to make late entries into 500 level events.

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    The 28-year-old was a champion in Hamburg in 2023, while he was a runner-up to Arthur Fils last year.

    Zverev was not initially planning to feature in Hamburg, but he changed his mind when offered the wildcard after his quarter-final loss to Musetti in Rome.

    The German will be the only top 10 star in the draw, and he will be joined by three other top 20 players: Frances Tiafoe, Andrey Rublev and Francisco Cerundolo.

    Jakub Mensik, Alejandro Davidovich Fokina, Felix Auger-Aliassime and Brandon Nakashima are set to be seeded from fifth to eighth.

    Updated Hamburg Open Entry List

    1) Alexander Zverev (WC)
    2) Frances Tiafoe
    3) Andrey Rublev
    4) Francisco Cerundolo
    5) Jakub Mensik
    6) Alejandro Davidovich Fokina
    7) Felix Auger-Aliassime
    8) Brandon Nakashima
    Sebastian Baez
    Flavio Cobolli
    Giovanni Mpetshi Perricard
    Jiri Lehecka
    Alexandre Muller
    Gael Monfils
    Marcos Giron
    Luciano Darderi
    Pedro Martinez
    Tomas Martin Etcheverry
    Roberto Bautista Agut
    Camilo Ugo Carabelli
    Francisco Comesana
    Damir Dzumhur
    Daniel Altmaier
    Yunchaokete Bu
    Alexander Bublik
    Jan-Lennard Struff (WC)
    Diego Dedura (WC)
    Justin Engel (WC)

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