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  • Chris Evert rates Iga Swiatek’s French Open chances as she names four favourites

    Tennis legend Chris Evert has voiced her concerns over Iga Swiatek’s form as she named her four favourites to win the women’s singles title at the 2025 French Open.

    Swiatek has been the dominant WTA player on clay this decade, having claimed the Roland Garros crown in four of the last five years and at each of the previous three editions.

    However, Swiatek has not reached a final at any tournament since her victory at the 2024 French Open.

    The world No 2 was badly out of sorts in a shock 6-1, 7-5 defeat to Danielle Collins in the third round of the Italian Open — where she was the reigning champion.

    Swiatek’s latest alarming defeat came after she was dismantled 6-1, 6-1 by Coco Gauff in the semi-finals of the Madrid Open.

    The Polish star’s clay campaign began at the WTA 500 in Stuttgart, where she was upset by Jelena Ostapenko in the quarter-finals — her sixth loss in as many meetings with the Latvian.

    Evert, who won a record seven French Open women’s titles, revealed she cannot choose between the leading contenders for the Paris Grand Slam.

    “I don’t know how you can pick anybody between [Aryna] Sabalenka, Iga and Coco, and with Madison Keys really to me would be my fourth pick,” the 18-time major winner told Forbes.

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    “I just don’t know how Iga is going to react. That, to me, is the unknown.

    “We know what she is capable of, and with her past records, she’s brilliant at the French Open, but I just don’t know if she can find her A game, because she’s going to need it. It’s kind of like we’re seeing her C game right now.”

    Evert has previously revealed she expects Swiatek to break her Roland Garros title record.

    “I’m worried about it every day. When I put my head under the pillow I’m worried about Iga,” the American said.

    “I think Iga will end up on double digits. I don’t just think she will beat my record here. I think it’s double digits.”

    The only active WTA players to win the Roland Garros title are Swiatek, Ostapenko and Barbora Krejcikova.

    Gauff was a French Open runner-up in 2022, Aryna Sabalenka’s best result is reaching the semi-finals in 2023.

    Australian Open champion Madison Keys was a semi-finalist at Roland Garros in 2018.

    READ NEXT: Coco Gauff and Emma Raducanu make feelings clear on playing each other in Rome

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  • WATCH: Arthur Fils and Stefanos Tsitsipas in tense Italian Open argument as umpire steps in

    Arthur Fils has shed light on the tense conversation he and Stefanos Tsitsipas engaged in following the pair’s third round encounter at the 2025 Italian Open.

    Fils battled to a 2-6, 6-4, 6-2 victory over Tsitsipas, the world No 19, in a pulsating contest at the Foro Italico.

    The world No 14 fought back from a set and 3-4, 15-30 down to improve his record against Tsitsipas to 4-0.

    With Tsitsipas serving at 3-3, 30-15 in the second set, the Greek won the point by hitting Fils on the body as he went straight down the middle of the court with a backhand.

    After Fils converted match point, there was a lengthy and animated exchange between the players at the net, with chair umpire Greg Allensworth stepping in.

    Fils explained he had no issue with Tsitsipas’ body shot while also revealing he used it as motivation to fuel his comeback.

    “I like him, he’s a great guy, a great champion. It was a bit tight in the middle of the second set,” the Frenchman said in his interview with Tennis TV.

    “He went for my body. It’s part of the game, there’s nothing wrong with it, but I tried to find a way to fight, so I found this kind of excuse to go and to fight.

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    “And okay, he told me at the end he was not going for my body and I told him, ‘I know it, I know it, it’s okay, it’s all good. I just needed to find a way to fight.’ Yeah, it worked (smiles).”

    The 20-year-old added: “I told him at the net he was playing unbelievable in the first set.

    “He was killing me with his forehand, his backhand, at the net. Serving very good. I could not do a lot of things but in the second set I started to find the rhythm and a way to fight and was happy to finish strong in the third.

    “If you let him play, I think he is one of the best clay-court players. His forehand is a huge weapon. I tried to put him under pressure because if I am not putting him under pressure, I am dead.”

    Fils will take on world No 2 Alexander Zverev in the last 16 in Rome.

    READ NEXT: Everything Jannik Sinner said after making winning return to action at the Italian Open

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  • Emma Raducanu clinches rankings breakthrough at Italian Open as she sets up Coco Gauff showdown

    Emma Raducanu continued her impressive run at the 2025 Italian Open with a comeback win against Veronika Kudermetova in the third round.

    The 2021 US Open champion claimed a 5-7, 6-0, 6-1 victory over 50th-ranked Kudermetova after two hours and 32 minutes on the Super Tennis Arena in Rome.

    Raducanu lost a strongly contested opening set after she was unable to serve it out at 5-4.

    The world No 49 responded by steamrolling her 28-year-old Russian opponent in both the second and third sets to seal a resounding win.

    Former British No 1 Annabel Croft assessed that Raducanu had “psychologically dismantled” Kudermetova while commentating on Sky Sports.

    Speaking to Sky Sports, Raducanu said: “The most pleasing part of today was recovering after losing the first set having served for it.

    “I think I threw in a pretty poor game at 5-4 serving but I felt under pressure on Veronika’s returns – she was literally red-lining everything and it was all going in. I didn’t know where to serve and it’s not a nice feeling to have.

    “I’m so happy with the way I didn’t let the rest of the match get away. With me, that’s big progress because of some of the matches I played in the past.

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    “I’m happy with the variety that I have with my shots. I was able to return from two different positions up and back, which is new, and I think I adopted the back in the last two matches and it’s helped me just get into the point and put me into a better position on the fourth ball, but I still think I can be better out of the corners.”

    The Brit is making just her second Italian Open appearance after losing her only previous match at the event in 2022.

    Raducanu has climbed seven places to world No 42 in the Live WTA Rankings with the 120 points she has gained from her three victories in the Italian capital. She reached a career-high ranking of world No 10 in July 2022.

    The 22-year-old has set up an intriguing last 16 showdown with world No 3 Coco Gauff at the WTA 1000 event.

    Gauff won the pair’s only previous meeting in the second round of the 2023 Australian Open. The 21-year-old American downed 32nd seed Magda Linette 7-5, 6-3 in her third round match in Rome.

    READ NEXT: Emma Raducanu wins humorous WTA award – ‘Oops!… she did it again!’

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  • Meet the man behind Carlos Alcaraz – who is Albert Molina?

    Carlos Alcaraz’s Netflix documentary threw up some interesting talking points, with the input from his manager Albert Molina proving be especially eye-catching.

    Molina was depicted as the unforgiving leader of the Alcaraz team, as he expressed his disdain for the young Spaniard’s decision to go on holiday to Ibiza after he won the French Open last June.

    Alcaraz provided the perfect answer to that criticism as he won Wimbledon a few weeks later, yet Molina suggested the sacrifices that need to be made to reach the top were not being observed by his young charge.

    “I tried to explain to him that it might not be the best idea to go to Ibiza for three or four days on vacation when he had Queen’s the following week and then Wimbledon,” said Molina, who was also shown admonishing Alcaraz when he was late for an engagement with a sponsor.

    “That day I got very angry with him, but not because of punctuality,” said Molina. “It bothered me not because of being late. For me, it was a lack of respect towards other people and that’s what I cannot tolerate with Carlos.

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    “It doesn’t matter if you’re number one in the world, nobody has to wait for you, Carlos.”

    Molina also outlined the sacrifices he is making to devote his life and career to helping Alcaraz realise his potential.

    “I have a wife, a 16-year-old son and a 13-year-old daughter. Unfortunately, I don’t spend much time with them because I have to provide for Carlos’ career,” stated Molina.

    “We live a kind of life that involves a lot of sacrifices, people think it’s all simple and fun, but it’s not exactly like that. My parents are getting older and I can’t be by their side as much as I would like. My birthday is during Wimbledon and I have always celebrated it alone in recent years.”

    Many were surprised by Molina’s eagerness to speak to Alcaraz almost as if he was giving his own son a telling off, but he has a unique position in the young Spaniard’s team after being part of his world since he was a junior players.

    Molina is a Murcia native and former representative of former Spanish players David Ferrer and Nicolas Almagro, with is desire to get the best out of Alcaraz evident.

    “I started watching Carlitos when he was 11 years old,” Molina told the ATP. “He left a very good impression on me. I remember him as a skinny kid who did a lot of things well. I was following him a lot and I tried to convince his parents to work with me. 

    “I knew I could help them with everything they needed in the development and progress of their son. At 12 years of age, after eight months watching him, his father decided it was a good idea, although he still thought maybe it was premature to have an agent at such a young age.”

    He was also instrumental in getting Juan Carlos Ferrero on board as Alcaraz’s coach, as he revealed details behind the addition of the former Grand Slam winner to the team.

    “Carlitos was playing in a Futures tournament in Murcia and I told Ferrero to come and see him,” he said. 

    “Straight away, you saw something different. There were players of his age that only did two things, but they did them very well, really making the most of them. With him, it was the opposite.

    “He had such a variety that he would often get it wrong by not being organised, he would get mixed up. In one point, he would approach the net, open up angles, play a slice, a lob and you could already see his winning character, bravery and daring.”

    The Netflix show highlighted the tight nature of Alcaraz’s inner circle, with Molina a key figure in his tennis and his life as he looks to continue his remarkably successful start to his career.

    READ NEXT: Carlos Alcaraz faces a fight to avoid a rankings slide despite possible move up to No 2

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  • Chris Evert gives her verdict Novak Djokovic’s Grand Slam prospects

    Tennis icon Chris Evert has cast doubt on Novak Djokovic’s chances of winning another Grand Slam title while also asserting she “would never underestimate him.”

    Djokovic‘s most recent Grand Slam triumph was the record-extending 24th men’s major title he secured at the 2023 US Open.

    The former world No 1, who will turn 38 on May 22, will have his next opportunity to add to his major tally at the 2025 French Open, which will run from May 25 to June 8.

    The Serbian has lost the last three matches he has played in straight sets, with a defeat to Jakub Mensik in the Miami Open final followed by disappointing opening match exits in Monte Carlo and Madrid.

    Djokovic chose to skip the Italian Open after his Madrid loss to Matteo Arnaldi, and he has added the event in Geneva to his schedule in the week before Roland Garros. He also played the ATP 250 in Switzerland last year.

    The world No 6 reached the quarter-finals at last year’s French Open before he was forced to withdraw ahead of his match with Casper Ruud with a meniscus tear. Djokovic won his third French Open title in 2023.

    In an interview with Forbes, Evert shared her thoughts on Djokovic’s Grand Slam quest ahead of the clay-court major.

    “I would never underestimate him, but I would be surprised if he won another major, let’s put it that way,” said the 18-time Grand Slam champion and former world No 1.

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    “I mean, you’ve got to give the guy credit. This guy’s won everything, more than anybody. I would never say he’s not going to win, but I would be surprised.

    “I would be pleasantly surprised, just with his results in the past and he’s human… I’m not feeling it.

    “I’ve seen him play brilliantly on grass, and he’s won Wimbledon so many times, that’s why I can’t say, ‘no, he’s not gonna win another one.’ I don’t think it’s gonna be the French Open… but you can never count him out.”

    Djokovic recently proclaimed that he still has the desire to achieve more in his career.

    “Obviously it’s challenging for me nowadays to produce the results I had when I was at my best,” Djokovic told Business Traveler USA.

    “It doesn’t mean that I will never be able to do that again. But that greatness changes its shape, and that’s because you’re a different person on an annual basis, on a monthly basis, on a weekly basis.

    “Tennis is a sport where it’s necessary to nurture that mentality of, ‘It’s never enough’. Because once it’s enough, then it’s really enough and you have to put the racket aside. And I still… I still don’t feel it’s enough for me.”

    READ NEXT: Novak Djokovic expected to renew key sponsor deal as huge claim is made about his retirement plans

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  • Iga Swiatek makes concerning admissions as she bluntly reacts to Italian Open shock

    Iga Swiatek admitted she “wasn’t present to fight and compete” during her shocking defeat to Danielle Collins at the 2025 Italian Open.

    The five-time Grand Slam champion was upset 6-1, 7-5 by Collins in the third round of the WTA 1000 tournament in Rome.

    Swiatek was the defending champion at the Italian Open and had won three of the previous four editions of the event.

    The 23-year-old Pole’s defeat means she will arrive at the 2025 French Open without having reached a final since securing her fourth Roland Garros crown last year.

    Here is every word Swiatek said in her mixed zone interview.

    Q. What were you processing on the court today?

    SWIATEK: For sure it hasn’t been easy. For sure I’m doing something wrong. So I need to just regroup and kind change some stuff. I had some advice from the team. I’ll just try to do this.

    Q. We can see it’s obviously difficult for you. Who are the people you lean on for emotional support?

    SWIATEK: Yeah, well, Daria [Abramowicz], like everybody from my team. Yeah, we talked and came to some conclusions. So yeah, I’m just going to change my mindset a little bit because…

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    Q. I saw you mentioned in the article that you sort of feel like you revert to old habits when you’re feeling under pressure, expectations. Was that something you felt like happened today at all?

    SWIATEK: I don’t know. Well, I think I just wasn’t there, present to, like, fight and to compete. I focused on mistakes. It’s my mistake, and I’m not doing things right. So yeah, the focus is on the wrong things from my side and I’ll try to change that.

    Q. Your expectations now going into Roland Garros…

    SWIATEK: Obviously it would be stupid to expect a lot because I’m not able to play my game right now. I’ll just try to, you know, as I said, change my mindset a little bit, try to regroup and just focus day by day working.

    Q. Other people have had great success at particular Grand Slams. Even if they come into them not playing great, they say they have a certain feeling.

    SWIATEK: I don’t care what other people had. There’s no point to compare.

    Q. Do you get a certain feeling when you come to Roland Garros?

    SWIATEK: It doesn’t matter what things I get. Every year is different, so… Doesn’t matter.

    READ NEXT: Emma Raducanu’s ‘crucial’ improvement on clay revealed by former Wimbledon winner

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  • Iga Swiatek set for shocking rankings collapse after latest nightmare defeat

    The nightmare continues for Iga Swiatek after another horrible defeat at this time her ranking is set to take a big hit.

    As a four-time French Open champion, Swiatek has been the ‘Queen of Clay’ for the last half a decade, but her form is unravelling in alarming fashion ahead of her defence of the Roland Garros title later this month.

    Swiatek won two games against Coco Gauff in a brutal semi-final defeat in the Madrid Open last week, but she started her Italian Open defence in encouraging fashion with a dominant win.

    Yet her vulnerabilities were graphically exposed once again as America’s Collins clinched a 6-1, 7-5 victory that will have a big impact on Swiatek’s ranking.

    “I played Iga so many times and the wins are in her favour,” said Collins. “When you play that many close matches and play some of your best tennis but lose, you learn a lot. I feel like I applied that today.

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    Former Wimbledon champion Marion Bartoli was courtside in her role with Sky Sports Tennis and she was stunned by what she witnessed.

    “It’s a massive shock,” she said. “To see Iga Swiatek going out so early in a clay court tournament before a Grand Slam, which is Roland Garros, when she is defending champion, is the biggest shock

    “She was struggling so much on the return of serve. On a few occasions in the second set, she could have broken and gotten herself back in 2-2, 15-15; she missed two routine returns of serve. The same in the back end of the set.

    “She just couldn’t get that strike into the court. It was very uncharacteristic compared to when she is playing her best tennis.”

    Swiatek was defending 1,000 points from her win in Rome last year and she will now lose 935 points, which will drop her down to No 4 in the current live rankings.

    This is significant as it could mean she faces world No 1 Aryna Sabalenka in the semi-finals at Roland Garros, yet the notion that the Polish star will make it through to that stage of the upcoming Grand Slam in Paris looks unlikely given her current form.

    Swiatek’s form has collapsed in 2025 and the manner of defeats makes her constant setbacks even more shocking.

    Her unforced error count rises the moment pressure is applied and opponents facing her on clay at Roland Garros will not be overwhelmed by the aura she used to bring onto the court.

    Swiatek may not be asked once again about the impact of coach Wim Fissette, who does not appear to have had a positive impact on her game since joining ‘Team Iga’ at the start of 2025.

    She was asked about Fissette by the media in Rome, she insisted her experienced coach was not the problem.

    I feel like I worked on some technical stuff on my serve and my forehand,” said Swiatek.

    “I know that I haven’t been always able to implement that on the match court, which is not perfect. This is tennis. I don’t have, like, three months to change some technical thing, then your body just remembers it. It would be much easier if we had a system like that.

    “My pre-season was short. I’m kind of catching up in between tournaments to improve the technical things. Yeah, I feel like some things have been better because of Wim, like my serve.

    “I feel like I wasn’t so good at implementing it all the time. Sometimes I changed the way I play in a way I shouldn’t have done, and it’s completely kind of on me.

    “Sometimes I make little bit wrong decisions. I think it’s because of me wanting to, I don’t know, play faster or finish the rally faster instead of being solid and building it. That’s why I was talking at the beginning about the discipline.

    Yeah, I think it’s all pretty connected. But I’m happy with the work I’m doing with Wim. So I’ll just continue. I’ll also try to be more, yeah, disciplined and make some nice better choices on court.”

    Swiatek’s positive words for Fissette may not endure as the general pattern when a player of this stature enjoyed a slump in form of this nature is to point the finger of blame elsewhere.

    Swiatek looks set to drop behind Coco Gauff and Jessica Pegula in the WTA Rankings when they are next updated and her rankings slide could get even worse if the defending champion goes out early at Roland Garros.

    READ NEXT: Iga Swiatek ‘irritated by headlines talking about falling apart or a mental crisis’

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  • Emma Raducanu has rediscovered a key part of her personality that made her special

    Emma Raducanu’s smile was one of the most memorable images of her 2021 US Open win, but it has been missing for long periods since that iconic victory in New York.

    It was almost as if it was too much too soon for Raducanu as she won a Grand Slam title before she was even close to being acclimatised to the WTA Tour, with the inevitable fall-out from a life-changing victory leading to plenty of challenges. 

    Raducanu made her debut in a long list of tournaments as a major champion, with the huge expectations her breakthrough moment created proving to be impossible for the young Brit to live up to.

    Pressure from sponsors to continue her incredible rise was coupled with a media spotlight that burned down on her every time she stepped on court and Raducanu openly admitted there were moments when tennis felt like a chore rather than a challenge.

    Injuries complicated her story, yet the fascination around an athlete who inspired so many young girls around the world with her incredible US Open has continued even though she wasn’t on court for long periods.

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    Her constant coaching changes drew criticism, online trolls delighted in her defeats, but the mood around Raducanu changed when she made it through to the quarter-finals of the Miami Open in March.

    The smile that was her trademark after each and every win on that amazing US Open run almost four year ago has also returned and that is telling.

    Raducanu seemed reluctant to play clay court events this time last year and she even turned down the chance to compete in qualifying for the French Open last June, but she has had a very different approach when selecting when to play on her least favourite surface this year.

    She battled hard in a second round defeat against Marta Kostyuk at the Madrid Open and now she is looking forward to a third round match at the Italian Open after a solid win against over Swiss lucky loser Jil Teichmann.

    “I still don’t really feel comfortable on clay, but in a way it helps me because I have to be super focused on every single point, just getting my feet right and to try and not fall over, so it is a big challenge,” Raducanu told Sky Sports.

    “The points are long, the balls do get heavier, and when I was serving it out, it was getting slower and slower, so it is physical but I’m slowly finding my feet.”

    Raducanu didn’t seem keen to take herself out of her comfort zone during the clay court season last year, as she took the option of waiting for some wildcards to play some grass court tournaments in her British homeland ahead of competing on the red dirt around Europe.

    She also seems to have rediscovered the joy on a tennis court, with the changes she has made to her service motion since Mark Petchey returned to her coaching set-up having an instant impact.

    “If you look at my serve now compared to Australia, compared to the Middle East, even Miami, I changed it after Miami with some tweaks and it’s a completely different motion,” she added.

    “I’m trying to make it a bit more fluid, a bit longer, so it’s hopefully more robust under pressure, but it’s by no means a finished product.

    “I feel there’s so much more room to grow it. I think this way I can maximise the potential.”

    

    Former Wimbledon champion Marion Bartoli believes the big improvement Raducanu has made on clay has come with her movement.

    “I think she’s moving better which is crucial on clay,” Bartolli told Sky Sports Tennis.

    “The surface is lively and you’re sliding all over the place, so you need to get your legs extremely strong.

    “You need to feel the ground really well and when I look at her muscle from the lower body she has been really putting in the work in the gym, which is probably why she decided to take a break after Miami to get those hours in the gym to make sure she was physically ready for the clay and grass too.”

    One big question mark that has been a constant focus of discussion around her constantly changing coaching set-up since her memorable US Open win in 2021, with Mark Petchey currently working on a part-time basis with the 22-year-old.

    Bartoli suggests that the situation needs to be firmed up, but she suggested Petchey’s upbeat appraoch has helped to change the mood in her camp.

    “Emma is probably looking for a coach who is not too technical,” she added.

    “She will really need someone on the court with her every day if she wants to work on her technique. She’s probably wanting someone to explain to her how the tactics work for that specific opponent.

    “They had to reposition her around the court because she had to cover the left side of the court [against Teichmann] so when you have the experience of someone as Mark, you can bring that on the table very quickly and sometimes that takes away the stress from the player.

    “I think that’s what she’s looking for in that dynamic. She’s going to her box quite often with eye contact which means she trusts the people inside that box.”

    Raducanu’s demeanour on and off the court has lifted since Petchey and long-term confident Jane O’Donoghue joined her coaching set-up in Miami and while there is concern that the duo are only available to work with her on a part-time basis, the second coming of Raducanu is threatening to be more enduring than her first breakthrough moment.

    READ NEXT: Emma Raducanu’s ‘crucial’ improvement on clay revealed by former Wimbledon winner

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  • Carlos Alcaraz faces a fight to avoid a rankings slide despite possible move up to No 2

    Carlos Alcaraz’s leap up to No 2 in the ATP live rankings has been confirmed, but the Spaniard’s hopes of replacing Jannik Sinner as world No 1 look forlorn for the next few months.

    Alcaraz failed to make the most of Sinner’s absence from the ATP Tour as the Italian served a three-month suspension for posting a positive doping test in March 2024.

    He is returning to action at this week’s Italian Open and his lead at the top of the ATP Rankings is big enough to ensure he will not be threatened any time soon.

    Alcaraz is the player most under threat in the rankings over the next couple of months, as he will have a massive 4,000 ranking points to defend from his wins at the French Open and Wimbledon last year.

    Zverev is also defending plenty of points, with the 1,000 he won at the Italian Open last year backed up by another huge haul of points from his appearance in last year’s Frencg Open final.

    Sinner will be the No 1 seed at the next two Grand Slam events at the French Open and Wimbledon and Alcaraz is on course to be No 2 seed for those events.

    Alcaraz has jumped above Alexander Zverev in the live ATP Rankings, with the German dropping 1,000 on his ranking from last year’s Rome Masters event.

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    If he defends his title in the Italian capital, he could reclaim the No 2 seeding position for the French Open which would ensure the earliest he could face Sinner would be in the Roland Garros final.

    Alcaraz will be keen to ensure he is the player who has that No 2 seeding berth, but he has admitted the pressure of chasing down Sinner during the Italian’s absence from the game has impacted his mindset.

    “Since Jannik hasn’t been able to play tournaments, a lot of people have asked me about it and talked about it, about how important a time it is for me to reach No 1 again or to win tournaments,” said Alcaraz.

    “Probably, in a way, I’ve been thinking about it too much instead of playing good tennis and enjoying myself on the court and in the matches. After Miami, I realised the path I have to follow and the things I have to do. I don’t have to think about the results or anything else, I just have to have fun.

    “That’s the most important thing for me, and not paying attention to expectations or what people say about you. That’s what I’m trying to do, and I think it’s going well for me so far.

    “I’m happy to have reached this level, but I think I can do better. At the beginning of the week, with the first clay-court tournament, you focus on adapting to the conditions. The ball comes to you differently, the game on clay is different. Once I’ve reached this level, I have to keep improving and, if possible, raise it.”

    For his part, Zverev has admitted he is not in the form needed to challenge Sinner or Alcaraz in the battle for the No 1 ranking, even though he lifted an ATP 500 title in Munich last month.

    “World No. 1? It would be nice. I don’t know. I have not been there. I believe I will. So we’ll see how it goes,” said Zverev as he spoke to the media in Rome.

    “I do think the media also loves to put players down, right? I had a bad two months before Munich, right? I didn’t play great tennis before Munich. All of a sudden, I’m like the worst world No 2 in the world ever. I don’t deserve to be there. I’m there because I won tournaments. I’m there because I have results.

    “The ranking system doesn’t lie. You get points for winning matches, you get points for winning titles. Yes, I know I didn’t play up to my standard. I know I didn’t play up to what I wanted to do. But neither did Carlos. Then he won Monte Carlo.

    “There are periods in a player’s career… Do you think Novak is happy with his results? Do you think Carlos is happy with his results? I’m not happy with my results.”

    Zverev and Alcaraz got their Italian Open campaigns off to a flying start with convincing wins in their opening matches, with the battle to be seeded No 2 at the French Open certain to be one of the big talking points over the next few days in Rome.

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    The post Carlos Alcaraz faces a fight to avoid a rankings slide despite possible move up to No 2 appeared first on Tennis365.

  • Geneva Open 2025 Entry List: Who is the top seed? Why is Novak Djokovic playing? Will Casper Ruud play?

    Novak Djokovic has given the Geneva Open a high-profile billing after accepting a late wildcard, but who else will feature at the ATP 250 event?

    The Swiss tournament and the Hamburg Open are the final two warm-up events before the second Grand Slam of the year, the French Open, with both scheduled for May 18-24.

    The big-name players usually opt to sit out the tournaments the week before a major, but Djokovic has decided to compete in Geneva as he only two completed matches on clay under his belt so far this season.

    The 24-time Grand Slam winner also entered the ATP 250 event last year as he also looked to get some game time ahead of Roland Garros.

    It was a good decision as he reached the semi-final in Geneva in 2024 and the quarter-final in Paris before injury forced him to withdraw.

    How many players will feature in the main draw of the 2025 Geneva Open?

    The ATP 250 event is a 28-player singles draw tournament and the top four seeds receive byes into the second round.

    Eighteen players have entered via their ranking, three players will receive wildcards, four will come through qualifying while there are also three spots for special exemption/protected ranking/special ranking.

    What about the points structure for the main draw?

    First round: 0
    Second round: 25
    Quarter-final: 50
    Semi-final: 100
    Runner-up: 165
    Winner: 2504

    Which players have received wildcards and what about notable names in qualifying?

    So far only Djokovic has been confirmed as a wildcard entry with organisers set to announce the other two wildcards in the coming week.

    World No 53 Nicolas Jarry is the highest seed in the qualifying draw with Gabriel Diallo (No 54), Benjamin Bonzi (No 58), Kei Nishikori (No 62) and Cameron Norrie (No 91) also set to play.

    Jarry, though, could still get in via his ranking as he is second on the alternates list with Roberto Bautista Agut first.

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    Who are the top eight seeds for the tournament?

    Taylor Fritz entered the tournament with a No 4 ranking and he will be the top seed for Swiss event followed by Djokovic, Casper Ruud, Grigor Dimitrov, Tomas Machac, Karen Khachanov, Alexei Popyrin and Denis Shapovalov.

    Who is the defending champion and will any other former winners play?

    Ruud is a three-time winner as he won the 2024 title when he defeated Tomas Machac in the final. His other trophies came in 2021 and 2022.

    But there should probably be an asterisk next to the Norwegian’s name as he is currently in action at the Italian Open and has had a busy period recently, as he won the Madrid Open last week and also reached the quarter-final in Barcelona.

    So don’t be too surprised if Ruud’s name is scratched from the entry list.

    Jarry, meanwhile, won the tournament in 2023, beating Grigor Dimitrov in the final.

    Confirmed Geneva Open Singles Entry List (Entry Rankings in Brackets)

    1. Taylor Fritz (4)
    2. (WC) Novak Djokovic (-)
    3. Casper Ruud (15)
    4. Grigor Dimitrov (16)
    5. Tomas Machac (20)
    6. Karen Khachanov (25)
    7. Alexei Popyrin (26)
    8. Denis Shapovalov (30)
    Hubert Hurkacz (28)
    Alex Michelsen (38)
    Tallon Griekspoor (34)
    Matteo Arnaldi (44)
    Nuno Borges (41)
    Jordan Thompson (40)
    Lorenzo Sonego (43)
    Miomir Kecmanovic (47)
    Zizou Bergs (50)
    Quentin Halys (52)
    Jaume Munar (53)
    (WC)
    (WC)
    (SE)
    (SE)
    (LE)
    (Q)
    (Q)
    (Q)
    (Q)

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