Are Nadal, Alcaraz, Djokovic playing Italian Open? When does it start?

The clay swing heads to Rome in May for the Italian Open as preparations continue for the French Open.

The combined ATP and WTA 1000 event is the last big tournament before players make their way to Roland-Garros, which starts on Sunday, May 26, live on Eurosport and discovery+.

Last year saw Daniil Medvedev and Elena Rybakina claim the singles titles, but will they repeat their respective triumphs this season?

The Italian Open will see almost all the top stars from both tours in action, and we run through all you need to know, including when it starts, what’s the schedule, when is the draw, and who’s playing…

When is the Italian Open?

Qualifying for the Italian Open starts on Monday, May 6 ahead of the main draw on Wednesday, May 8.

The finals will be held on the weekend of May 18.

As with the Madrid Open, the 32 seeds get a first-round bye so they enter the tournament in the second round.

Play will start at 10am UK time every day until Thursday, May 16 when it begins at midday. There will be evening sessions starting at 6pm each day until finals weekend, when play starts at midday on both days.

When is the Italian Open draw?

The draw is expected to be held on Monday, May 6.

Are Novak Djokovic and Rafael Nadal playing the Italian Open?

Both Novak Djokovic and Rafael Nadal look set to play in Rome.

It will be the first clay tournament that the two tennis greats have contested since the 2022 French Open, when Nadal beat Djokovic on his way to a 14th title.

Djokovic missed the Madrid Open and has only played one clay tournament in Monte Carlo, where he made the semis.

He is a 10-time winner of the Italian Open and looks set to play the tournament for the final time ahead of his potential retirement this year.

Will Carlos Alcaraz and Jannik Sinner play the Italian Open?

Both Carlos Alcaraz and Jannik Sinner have injury concerns ahead of the Italian Open.

Alcaraz has been battling a forearm injury that forced him to miss Monte Carlo and Barcelona. He made the quarter-finals in Madrid but admitted to having “difficult feelings” towards the end of his loss against Andrey Rublev.

After a stunning start to the year the Italian could have a chance to get to world No. 1 in Rome if he is healthy to play.

Who else is playing the Italian Open?

Defending champion Daniil Medvedev will be back in Rome along with Alexander Zverev, Stefanos Tsitsipas and Casper Ruud.

Andy Murray will not be playing as he continues his recovery from an ankle injury.

Iga Swiatek and Aryna Sabalenka will lead the women’s draw.

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Elena Rybakina celebrates winning the Italian Open in 2023

Image credit: Getty Images

Neither won the title last year as Swiatek retired with injury in the quarter-finals and Sabalenka was shocked in the second round by Sofia Kenin.

Elena Rybakina was the champion in 2023 and she will be aiming to continue her strong start to the season with another title run.

World No. 3 Coco Gauff could close the gap on world No. 1 Swiatek if she can go far in Rome.

Emma Raducanu’s participation is uncertain. She has not been announced as a wildcard entry but could enter qualifying with her protected ranking.

When is the French Open?

The 2024 French Open main draw starts on Sunday, May 26, with the tournament one of two Grand Slams, along with the Australian Open, that is run over 15 days instead of 14 this year.

The singles finals will be held on the weekend of June 8.

Play starts at 10am UK time every day except for finals weekend, and there will be an evening session scheduled from 7.15pm UK time every day until the semi-finals start on Thursday, June 6.

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Sinner withdraws from Madrid Open as hip injury sparks French Open fitness race

Jannik Sinner has pulled out of the Madrid Open through injury, the player has confirmed on social media.

The Italian, who won the Australian Open in January, is the top seed in Madrid and has been forced to miss his quarter-final tie on Thursday with Felix Auger-Aliassime.

In a post on social media, Sinner explained that he has been advised to pull out his clash with the American due to a growing hip problem.

“Very sad to have to withdraw from my next match here in Madrid,” Sinner wrote on X.

“My hip has been bothering me this week and has slowly been getting more painful.

“Taking the advice from the doctors we decided it’s best to not play further and make it worse.”

He added: “I’ll be doing some more tests in the coming days and follow the advice from the specialists on recovery. Thank you guys for all your support.”

Sinner was already a doubt coming into his last-eight match with Auger-Aliassime, and the confirmation of his absence has also cast doubt on his availability to play at the French Open next month.

The 20-year-old, who reached the quarter-finals in Paris in 2020, was knocked out in the second round last year while making the fourth round in both 2021 and 2022.

If fit enough, he would head into this year’s tournament with an impressive 28-2 record under his belt this season.

Having wrapped up his first Grand Slam in Australia earlier this year, Sinner has also won the Rotterdam Open and the Miami Open.

The 22-year-old was also in great form in Madrid where he beat compatriot Lorenzo Sonego in the opening round, before moving past Pavel Kotov and Karen Khachanov to reach the last eight.

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Sinner withdraws from Madrid Open as hip injury sparks French Open fitness race

Jannik Sinner has pulled out of the Madrid Open through injury, the player has confirmed on social media.

The Italian, who won the Australian Open in January, is the top seed in Madrid and has been forced to miss his quarter-final tie on Thursday with Felix Auger-Aliassime.

In a post on social media, Sinner explained that he has been advised to pull out his clash with the American due to a growing hip problem.

“Very sad to have to withdraw from my next match here in Madrid,” Sinner wrote on X.

“My hip has been bothering me this week and has slowly been getting more painful.

“Taking the advice from the doctors we decided it’s best to not play further and make it worse.”

He added: “I’ll be doing some more tests in the coming days and follow the advice from the specialists on recovery. Thank you guys for all your support.”

Sinner was already a doubt coming into his last-eight match with Auger-Aliassime, and the confirmation of his absence has also cast doubt on his availability to play at the French Open next month.

The 20-year-old, who reached the quarter-finals in Paris in 2020, was knocked out in the second round last year while making the fourth round in both 2021 and 2022.

If fit enough, he would head into this year’s tournament with an impressive 28-2 record under his belt this season.

Having wrapped up his first Grand Slam in Australia earlier this year, Sinner has also won the Rotterdam Open and the Miami Open.

The 22-year-old was also in great form in Madrid where he beat compatriot Lorenzo Sonego in the opening round, before moving past Pavel Kotov and Karen Khachanov to reach the last eight.

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‘I kept fighting’ – Alcaraz survives Struff scare to make quarter-finals, Sinner progresses

Carlos Alcaraz survived a huge scare to beat Jan-Lennard Struff and reach the quarter-finals of the Madrid Open, progressing 6-3 6-7(5) 7-6(4) after winning a third set tie-break.

A pulsating, compelling match saw Struff provide a huge challenge to Alcaraz, like he did in last year’s final.

Home favourite Alcaraz is going for a third straight title at the tournament but he knew he was in for a difficult afternoon from the very early stages.

Struff missed three break point opportunities in the third game of the first set and the Spaniard left him rueful, as he took the first break of the match to go 4-2 ahead, before seeing out the set 6-3.

The tie was seemingly only heading in one direction as Alcaraz broke Struff in the first game of the second set – giving the German a huge mountain to climb to stay in the competition.

Forehands were exploding from the racquet of the world No. 3, but his usually dependable drop-shot game was lacking.

As he attempted to take a 2-0 lead in the second, Alcaraz flashed a disbelieving grin as he watched another effort drop short on game point.

Despite eventually seizing that 2-0 advantage, Alcaraz was left stunned as Struff upped the level of his performance to fight back.

Aggressive, powerful play from the German saw him take three games on the bounce and, after losing just two points on serve in four games, pushed Alcaraz to serve to stay in the set.

Another missed drop shot failed to disrupt Alcaraz as he held to make it 5-5, before shaky service games from both were overcome to force a tie-break.

Alcaraz started the breaker the better, but five consecutive points from Struff gave him three set points and, at the third time of asking, he forced a deciding set with an ace down the middle.

There was pure joy from Alcaraz at the start of the third set. Not just because he held serve but because he finally executed a drop shot of beauty on Manolo Santana stadium.

More celebratory fist pumps followed as he made the first break of the decider at 3-1.

Struff was far from done, though, and he bit back once again and, as Alcaraz passed up four match points at 5-3, a worried silence spread across the Spanish capital.

The bouncebackability of Struff saw him take a set, which was well beyond him on several occasions, to a tie-break.

Alcaraz took a 3-0 lead but Struff fought back yet again to level the breaker, before the home favourite eventually progressed, albeit via an unintentional detour.

After the match, Alcaraz said: “It was difficult with me to deal with my emotions, handle certain moments, difficult moments in the match.

“I kept fighting, that’s all that matters.”

Speaking about his home advantage, Alcaraz said: “Well I think I have to say thanks to the people here who are supporting me until the last point.

“It was a great support after those difficult moments I had at the end of the third set. They push me up to not give up and keep fighting.”

Andrey Rublev awaits in the next round.

Sinner prevails after gruelling Khachanov test

Jannik Sinner was made to fight hard – and come from a set down – to eventually dispatch the challenge of Karen Khachanov and reach the quarter-finals in Madrid for the first time, winning 5-7 6-3 6-3.

Sinner suffered with a hip issue during his win against Pavel Kotov in Madrid and his aches and pains will have been tested even further in an uncomfortable duel with Khachanov.

An intriguing battle started as it transpired to go on with the pair fighting to hold serve until 5-5, with Khachanov the only player having a sniff of a break point – which Sinner doused.

Khachanov did take his next chance to make the breakthrough, though, going 6-5 up on his opponent’s serve, before serving to love to move a set ahead.

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Highlights: Sinner edges past Khachanov to make quarters in Madrid

The Russian came into this with just one win from his four matches against Sinner, so knew the world No. 2 would not back down easily and so it proved as he made an early break in the second before racing into a 3-0 lead.

Sinner controlled proceedings with the class that has seen him rise up the rankings and levelled things by taking the second set 6-3.

Khachanov’s response to being pegged back was to deliver a brutal opening service game in the third set – taking it to love.

However, he went on to miss two break point opportunities before Sinner moved ahead at 3-2 by taking his first opportunity of the set to win on the Khachanov serve.

Sinner held his serve before breaking his opponent once more to book his place in the last-8.

He will play either Felix Auger-Aliassime or Casper Ruud next.

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Madrid Open: Are Nadal, Djokovic, Alcaraz and Raducanu playing?

The Madrid Open will feature the top stars from the ATP and WTA tours.

Carlos Alcaraz has won the men’s title the last two successive years and is bidding to become the first player to win three in a row.

The women’s trophy was won by Aryna Sabalenka as she beat Iga Swiatek in the final.

Who’s playing the Madrid Open this season? Are Novak Djokovic, Rafael Nadal, Alcaraz, Swiatek and Sabalenka playing? When is the draw?

When is the Madrid Open?

The WTA main draw at the Madrid Open starts on Tuesday, April 23 and the ATP main draw starts on Wednesday, April 24.

Play starts at 10am UK time every day until midway through the second week. From May 1 to May 3, play begins at midday UK time, and on finals weekend play starts at 2.30pm.

There are also night sessions running from April 26 to May 3 which start at 7pm.

The women’s final will be held on Saturday, May 4 and the men’s final will be on Sunday, May 5.

When is the Madrid Open draw?

The women’s singles draw will be held on Sunday, April 21 at 5pm UK time and the men’s draw will be on Monday, April 22.

Who is playing the Madrid Open?

The Madrid Open was set to be the first clay event that both Novak Djokovic and Rafael Nadal have played since the 2022 French Open – until Djokovic pulled out.

Djokovic has not given a reason for his withdrawal, but his absence means world No. 2 Jannik Sinner will be the top seed.

Nadal will be unseeded as he continues his comeback using a protected ranking.

Carlos Alcaraz’s status is unknown after he missed Monte Carlo and Barcelona due to an arm injury.

The world No. 3 is in Madrid ahead of the tournament, but said last week in Barcelona: “My goal is to try and go to the Madrid Open, but at the moment nothing is certain.

“I was given specific recovery times and I’ve respected them, but I haven’t felt good. I don’t want to get ahead of myself.”

Alcaraz hasn’t played since losing in the Miami Open quarter-finals.

Iga Swiatek and Aryna Sabalenka will headline the women’s draw.

The pair contested the final in Madrid last year and as the top two seeds could meet again with the trophy on the line.

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Aryna Sabalenka won Madrid in 2023

Image credit: Getty Images

Coco Gauff and Elena Rybakina will be among those looking to challenge for the title, while two-time champion Simona Halep and former runner-up Caroline Wozniacki have both got wildcards.

This will be Halep’s second tournament since returning to the tour after her doping ban was reduced from four years to nine months.

Naomi Osaka is also on the entry list but Emma Raducanu isn’t currently in the draw.

However, as she is not ranked high enough for entry, unless she gets a late wildcard she looks set to miss Madrid.

Djokovic set for Rome return

This is only the third time since 2015 that Djokovic has not won a title by this stage of the season.

The other two times were in 2022, when he was unable to play in Australia or the United States due to being unvaccinated for Covid-19, and 2018, when he had elbow surgery early in the year.

This season he had only played three tournaments before Monte Carlo, losing to Alex de Minaur at the United Cup, Jannik Sinner in the Australian Open semis, and then the upset in the third round at Indian Wells against lucky loser Luca Nardi.

It looks like he is next going to play the Italian Open, which starts on May 8, as he builds up for the French Open, Wimbledon and Olympics.

“I want to reach my peak for Paris – that’s where I want to play my best tennis,” said Djokovic in Monte Carlo.

“Anything else is a bonus, so let’s see what happens.”

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Madrid Open: Are Nadal, Djokovic, Alcaraz and Raducanu playing?

The Madrid Open will feature the top stars from the ATP and WTA tours.

Carlos Alcaraz has won the men’s title the last two successive years and is bidding to become the first player to win three in a row.

The women’s trophy was won by Aryna Sabalenka as she beat Iga Swiatek in the final.

Who’s playing the Madrid Open this season? Are Novak Djokovic, Rafael Nadal, Alcaraz, Swiatek and Sabalenka playing? When is the draw?

When is the Madrid Open?

The WTA main draw at the Madrid Open starts on Tuesday, April 23 and the ATP main draw starts on Wednesday, April 24.

Play starts at 10am UK time every day until midway through the second week. From May 1 to May 3, play begins at midday UK time, and on finals weekend play starts at 2.30pm.

There are also night sessions running from April 26 to May 3 which start at 7pm.

The women’s final will be held on Saturday, May 4 and the men’s final will be on Sunday, May 5.

When is the Madrid Open draw?

The women’s singles draw will be held on Sunday, April 21 at 5pm UK time and the men’s draw will be on Monday, April 22.

Who is playing the Madrid Open?

The Madrid Open was set to be the first clay event that both Novak Djokovic and Rafael Nadal have played since the 2022 French Open – until Djokovic pulled out.

Djokovic has not given a reason for his withdrawal, but his absence means world No. 2 Jannik Sinner will be the top seed.

Nadal will be unseeded as he continues his comeback using a protected ranking.

Carlos Alcaraz’s status is unknown after he missed Monte Carlo and Barcelona due to an arm injury.

The world No. 3 is in Madrid ahead of the tournament, but said last week in Barcelona: “My goal is to try and go to the Madrid Open, but at the moment nothing is certain.

“I was given specific recovery times and I’ve respected them, but I haven’t felt good. I don’t want to get ahead of myself.”

Alcaraz hasn’t played since losing in the Miami Open quarter-finals.

Iga Swiatek and Aryna Sabalenka will headline the women’s draw.

The pair contested the final in Madrid last year and as the top two seeds could meet again with the trophy on the line.

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Aryna Sabalenka won Madrid in 2023

Image credit: Getty Images

Coco Gauff and Elena Rybakina will be among those looking to challenge for the title, while two-time champion Simona Halep and former runner-up Caroline Wozniacki have both got wildcards.

This will be Halep’s second tournament since returning to the tour after her doping ban was reduced from four years to nine months.

Naomi Osaka is also on the entry list but Emma Raducanu isn’t currently in the draw.

However, as she is not ranked high enough for entry, unless she gets a late wildcard she looks set to miss Madrid.

Djokovic set for Rome return

This is only the third time since 2015 that Djokovic has not won a title by this stage of the season.

The other two times were in 2022, when he was unable to play in Australia or the United States due to being unvaccinated for Covid-19, and 2018, when he had elbow surgery early in the year.

This season he had only played three tournaments before Monte Carlo, losing to Alex de Minaur at the United Cup, Jannik Sinner in the Australian Open semis, and then the upset in the third round at Indian Wells against lucky loser Luca Nardi.

It looks like he is next going to play the Italian Open, which starts on May 8, as he builds up for the French Open, Wimbledon and Olympics.

“I want to reach my peak for Paris – that’s where I want to play my best tennis,” said Djokovic in Monte Carlo.

“Anything else is a bonus, so let’s see what happens.”

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‘Tough one to swallow’ – Sinner, Tsitsipas agree line call altered course of semi-final

Stefanos Tsitsipas admitted a controversial line call that went in his favour changed the outcome of his Monte Carlo Masters semi-final against Jannik Sinner.

However, it could have been Sinner who progressed.

With Tsitsipas serving at 3-1 down in the third set and facing a break point, a second serve was called in when replays showed it had gone long.

“It might have had a bigger influence to my opponent than it had on me,” admitted Tsitsipas afterwards.

“I think the match would have turned out completely different if that would have been called out. I will agree that it would have been pretty bad for me if that call was made. There are a lot of weird things on clay that we don’t see on other surfaces. One of them is the line calling and sometimes the marking.”

Sinner did not seem overly annoyed by the call at the time, but admitted afterwards that it lingered and said thinking about it caused him to cramp as Tsitsipas fought back into the match.

“It’s tough, a tough one to swallow, because I was playing at some point great tennis,” he said.

“Everyone can make mistakes unfortunately or fortunately. You know, also I can make mistakes. And it went like this.

“Then after, having cramps, it’s a consequence most likely of what happened because it also goes in the nervous side of the brain and then after, it’s not easy to play. I still tried to do the best I could.

“Stefanos raised the level, but when the momentum changes, it goes like this. This is the fun part of tennis.”

Tsitsipas will be bidding for his third Monte Carlo title when he faces Ruud in Sunday’s final.

The Greek has looked in excellent touch this week and against Sinner finished with seven aces and 27 winners.

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Djokovic v Ruud – Monte Carlo highlights

“It was one of the best first sets I have played on clay,” he said.

“So much consistency and great quality of shot-making. Just pure, clean game from start to finish. I was playing as equally good on the cross as I was playing on the down the line.

“It was a great feeling to be kind of in the zone right from the beginning.”

He is, though, wary of the danger posed by Tsitsipas.

“Stefanos is a fantastic player on all surfaces, but clay, I think he has had more success in his career so far. He won here two times, so obviously he’s feeling comfortable here,” Ruud said.

“The last six, seven, eight months has not been I think perfect for him, and he fell out of the top 10 and a few things… He’s been a steady top 10, top five player for many years already.

“He is always going to be a dangerous player and seems like he’s back in good shape. I’m going to have to expect the best version of Stefanos tomorrow.”

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‘Tennis at its highest level’ – Tsitsipas downs Sinner to reach another Monte-Carlo final

Stefanos Tsitsipas beat Jannik Sinner 6-4 3-6 6-4 in their semi-final on Saturday to reach his third Monte-Carlo Masters final in the last four years.

Tsitsipas took the first set 6-4 and the Greek was relying on a powerful serve much more than his opponent.

Sinner came into the encounter as the only Grand Slam winner of the year so far, with both players preparing for the next Slam, at Roland-Garros in Paris next month.

Tsitsipas has said he is keen to break back into the top 10 after an indifferent 2023, while for Sinner the task is to demonstrate that he is now one of the sport’s most consistent players.

The 22-year-old Italian hit back in the second set when he claimed it 6-3 to level at one set apiece to set up a decisive third.

Sinner then broke his rival and held his serve to move 4-2 clear in the third set, needing to hold his serve – and his nerve – to clinch a place in the final to play the winner of the day’s other semi-final, between world No. 1 Novak Djokovic and Casper Ruud.

Tsitsipas took Sinner to break point as he tried to get back to parity with the margin for error dwindling, but Sinner battled back to deuce three times before ultimately failing to hold on.

Buoyed by his resilience, Tsitsipas did not look back and forced through two games in quick succession to wrap up victory.

“It was tennis at its highest level that I have been able to play. Jannik was an extremely difficult opponent and it can be seen throughout the year so far. He has been very consistent and I could see that throughout today with his game,” Tsitsipas said after his win.

“He is one of the toughest opponents I have faced so far and to find ways when there weren’t that many, I am proud of that. He gave me a very difficult game and [the] way I overcame it is true excellence.”

The victory gives him the chance to earn his third title at the tournament after winning back in 2021 and 2022, and he now sits at No. 9 in the live rankings.

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Why Sinner-Rune rivalry could be one of the biggest in tennis over next decade

The fourth edition of a battle many believe will become a key rivalry in the hunt for major trophies over the next decade took place under the spotlight of the blazing Monte Carlo sun on Friday and was the headline match of this year’s quarter-finals.

The 24-time Grand Slam champion Novak Djokovic may have raised an eyebrow at such a bold claim when he’s in town, but a mouthwatering showdown between two starlets on the cusp of superstardom, ‘is tennis’, according to the ATP’s campaign to promote its brand for 2024.

‘New season, new era, new attitude’ is its boast with the likes of Carlos Alcaraz and Jannik Sinner taking centre stage as its poster boys.

The fact Holger Rune – tipped to emerge alongside the other two as a multiple Grand Slam winner and as a member of the new ‘Big 3’ – is in the promo video but not on the main poster says much about the Dane’s mixed fortunes since exploding onto the scene by winning the Paris Masters as a teenager at the back end of 2022.

Rune, now 20, seemed to be on the verge of matching Alcaraz’s trophy-laden exploits when he put together an 18-5 record across six Masters 1000 tournaments from Paris 2022 through to Rome the following year.

The Scandinavian was the runner-up here in Monte Carlo and Rome and has also reached three Grand Slam quarter-finals, but there is no doubt the former world No. 4’s level in the second part of 2023 dropped significantly.

Instead, it was Sinner who embarked upon an unstoppable surge at the end of the year and carried it into 2024 with his maiden major title in Australia, leaving him as one of two young guns (along with Alcaraz) that currently look the most capable of stopping Djokovic’s recent monopoly of majors.

Indeed, talk of the new ‘Big 3’ has stalled somewhat, although there are signs Rune is finding his feet again after a reunion with Patrick Mouratoglou followed on from the short experiment with Boris Becker.

Despite the dip, Rune’s pedigree is clear to most within the sport and it is therefore felt it is only a matter of time until ‘the new Big 3’ starts trending on social media again.

This match between Rune and Sinner on Court Rainier III was the fourth edition in what the sport is desperate to see develop as a regular H2H meeting of new heroes of the men’s game at the business end of the biggest tournaments.

Two heavyweights hitting halcyon tennis heights with silverware on the line is what helped define the rivalries between the likes of Djokovic, Rafael Nadal and Roger Federer and the ATP are obviously very keen for that sort of gap to be filled in the years ahead when all three greats have finally hung up their racquets.

This was an intriguing tussle between Sinner’s power game and Rune’s variety. It also saw the hot-headed Dane – fittingly donning a fiery orange attire – at the centre of some disputes with the umpire and happily playing villain versus a large contingent of Italian supporters, seemingly feeding off their boos.

It juxtaposed perfectly with the ice-cool poker face of his opponent, wearing an understated black-green combination, and seemingly unwilling to get involved when the fireworks erupted on the other side of the net.

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‘We believe in ourselves’ – Sinner on rising to stardom with Alcaraz and Rune

The previous three encounters between the pair went the distance, so it was only fitting Rune saved two match points in the second set tie-break to push it to a third.

He threatened an upset briefly but in the end it was the in-form Sinner who edged a high-octane contest to delight the pro-Italian crowd and square the H2H at 2-2. The 22-year-old also avenged his defeat to the Dane on this very court at the semi-final stage last year.

The loss will see Rune drop out of the top 10 in the rankings for the first time since 2023 with a record of 15-8 for the year. It is a minor blow for the youngster, but this was a high-class showing from the Dane and he can take some positives from the example of Sinner and his recent change in fortune. The Italian ended 2022 on a 19-2 run (2-2 in finals) after going from a woeful 1-6 from January-February and 0-7 from June-July.

Sinner is now 25-1 for this calendar year and is only the third man in history to reach the last four of the first three Masters 1000 events of the year on multiple occasions (Indian Wells, Miami and Monte Carlo). Only Rafael Nadal (four times) and Novak Djokovic (three times) have previously achieved the feat more than once, with Sinner doing it in back-to-back years (2023 and now 2024).

The victory also ensures Sinner will remain at No. 2 in the world come Monday and keeps him on course for a potential blockbuster of a final with Djokovic, should the top two male players on the planet manage to navigate their respective semi finals.

For now, the Sinner-Rune rivalry is tied and ready to bubble along nicely, particularly if Rune has a resurgence. As a result, it isn’t A-list material just yet, but time tussling at the very top can change that with the contrast of styles and personalities as well as undoubted talent and desire to succeed at both ends of the net making future battles almost certain to live up to the hype.

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Tsitsipas downs Khachanov to set up semi-final with Sinner or Rune

Stefanos Tsitsipas continued his winning run at the Monte-Carlo Masters with a 6-4 6-2 quarter-final victory over Karen Khachanov.

The Greek world No. 12 is hoping to crack the top 10 once more, and he is now in the semi-finals in Monaco as he looks to add more points for his ATP ranking.

Tsitsipas needed 83 minutes for his straight-sets victory against the Russian as he held off the big-hitting No. 17.

He has both the 2021 and 2022 titles to his name, but the 25-year-old suffered a drop-off in form over the last season, and he will now face the winner of another quarter-final tie, where Jannik Sinner takes on Holger Rune.

“I would lie if I said it doesn’t bring good memories stepping out on this court,” Tsitsipas said after the win.

“It’s something that I attribute some of my performances here over time to.

“I come back here, and I sort of relive those memories of the past. It gives good feelings to me when I’m able to play in front of crowds like this and be able to try and strive for excellence with my game.”

Tsitsipas started well with a confidence-boosting break in the very first game, and while he was immediately broken back, he continued to use his serve to keep his opponent on the back foot.

When receiving serve he was more effective than Khachanov – who needed the physio at 2-2 in the second – who started to make more errors.

Tsitsipas added: “My returns were effective. I was generating a lot of pace and gained good momentum at some point.

“He seemed good and well composed in his tennis. He wasn’t giving away too many unforced errors and seemed pretty calm from behind the baseline.

“I tried to do my part, which was to press as much as I could and not rush myself into the rallies.

“I was trying to predict and read certain things on the court and it worked out pretty well. I took my time once again to understand what works and what doesn’t and today I was persistent in my efforts to walk away with something good.”

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