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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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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‘Not a great season’ – Djokovic reacts to Monte Carlo loss, as Ruud says ‘he’s human’

Novak Djokovic tasted defeat yet again in 2024, losing in the Monte Carlo semi-finals to Casper Ruud to leave the world No. 1 labelling his year so far as “not a great season at all”.

It is an unusual position for the Serbian great to find himself in, such is the “high standard” he sets for himself – with Ruud managing to beat Djokovic for the first time in six attempts.

Djokovic lost to Alex de Minaur in the United Cup – his chosen Australian Open warm-up event – and to Jannik Sinner in Melbourne, before being beaten by Luca Nardi in Indian Wells. Add in the defeat to Ruud, and it is clear this season is not shaping up how Djokovic might have hoped.

Mitigating circumstances do exist – this was Djokovic’s first tournament of the year on clay, while Ruud has already played in Estoril and thus was perhaps better prepared for the conditions in Monaco. Those conditions varied hugely too, with rain and unseasonably cooler weather for the players to contend with over the first few days, before the sun came out and conditions quickened.

“I’m used to really high standard in terms of expectations of the results, so not having a title is, maybe comparing to the last 15 years, not a great season at all,” Djokovic said.

“But I had semis of Australia, semis here. I only played three tournaments this year, so of course, you know, it’s normal to expect that you have some seasons where you don’t start well, and this is the one.

“Hopefully, yeah, I can pick up, in terms of results, I can build from here, because, you know, I played some good tennis. Hopefully in the next tournaments I’ll be able to play even better.”

This is not Djokovic’s worst start to a season – far from it. In 2018 he did not win a title until Wimbledon and did not make a single final on the hard or clay courts in the opening part of the season.

But given how much is expected of the 24-time major winner, his lacklustre start to the campaign has been noted by many, not least the way he lost in Monte Carlo – with a double fault on match point.

“Of course, I’m disappointed, you know, to lose a match like this,” Djokovic said of his semi-final defeat.

“I had my chances, but yeah, last game was not great. Unforced errors and just he was solid I think until the last shot and deserved to win. My game was kind of up and down.

“I mean, the positive thing is that I kind of managed to come back after losing the first set and really find the strength in the game. So, there are positives to take away from this tournament, for sure, but of course disappointed with the loss.”

As for Ruud, he is a proven performer on the dirt courts so to see him make his first final in Monaco is not unexpected, but it did surprise a few given his prior record against Djokovic.

“Obviously Novak is Novak,” Ruud said. “He’s human. Sometimes he doesn’t seem like it, but he is like everyone else.

“I think what really motivated me and helped me a bit today was maybe that I thought about, you know, he lost a match in Indian Wells to Luca Nardi, and he showed there that he’s also vulnerable sometimes. Not many times in a year, but a few days here and there he’s possible to beat.

“If you see that someone has done really well in the beginning of the year, it’s tough to play them, because you’re expecting, wow, this guy is almost impossible to beat. But if you see that many or other players have beaten him before, you believe a bit more in yourself also.”

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Casper Ruud, Monte Carlo 2024

Image credit: Getty Images

With the rise of Sinner, the hype surrounding Carlos Alcaraz, Holger Rune playing exciting tennis and Grigor Dimitrov rolling back the years, there is plenty of talent on show on the men’s tour at the moment, but Ruud maintains Djokovic sets the standard.

Ruud said: “In my eyes, [Djokovic is] of the all-time players to try to beat. Today I was able to do it. Something I can remember for the rest of my life and tell hopefully my kids in the future and my grandkids when I’m getting old that, you know, I beat Novak one time at least.

“No one knows how long he plans to play for, but obviously he’s getting older, but he’s still physically in good shape and playing fantastic tennis. But it’s always fun to play against him, because, you know, it’s one of the toughest challenges in our sport.”

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‘In a state of shock’ – Ruud upsets Djokovic to make Monte Carlo final for first time

On a day of upsets in the Principality, Casper Ruud beat Novak Djokovic in the Monte Carlo Masters to make the final for the first time.

He beat the world No. 1 6-4 1-6 6-4, with Djokovic serving a double fault at match-point down to gift his opponent the crucial break and the victory.

The last point might have been a donation but the match as a whole was not, with Ruud playing some exceptional tennis as he kept the pressure on Djokovic in the crucial moments, not letting his opponent settle on a hot and sultry day in Monte Carlo.

“Tomorrow is going to be a special day, first time playing in a final in Monte Carlo, I’ll give it my all. Stef is playing well, he’s a great player on clay – clay is where he’s had the most success, but I’m up for it,” said Ruud.

Ruud and Djokovic had last met in the final of Roland-Garros last season, the Serbian running out a straight-sets winner that day. Not helping Ruud’s case on paper ahead of their semi-final was the fact that as well as Djokovic leading their head-to-head 5-0, the Norwegian had never taken a set off the world No. 1 in any encounter.

Despite that worrying record, it was Ruud who started the brighter, breaking Djokovic in the first game. The Norwegian world No. 10 was troubling Djokovic with the accuracy of his groundstrokes, with the error count mounting for the Serbian.

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Novak Djokovic

Image credit: Getty Images

Ruud served for a 5-1 lead after breaking a second time, the crowd sensing a second upset of the day following Tsitsipas’ victory over Sinner earlier on. But Djokovic seemed to steady himself and broke straight back, as his forehand began to find its mark. Holding again, Djokovic forced Ruud to serve it out.

Serving it out is what Ruud did with no sign of any nerves to take his first set against Djokovic 6-4. 16 unforced errors – most coming from the forehand side – doing the damage for Djokovic.

Ruud knew a response would be incoming. Djokovic held and then broke at the start of the second set to lead 3-0.

The second set flew by with Djokovic taking it 6-1, his forehand doing the damage as Ruud looked powerless from the back of the court, unable to deal with the angles his opponent was creating from seemingly nowhere.

Ruud regrouped at the change of ends, coming out and breaking Djokovic first up at the start of the deciding set – although he had a helping hand from his opponent, who threw in five unforced errors in the opening two games.

It was the out-of-sorts Djokovic from the opening set who had made a late reappearance, the Serbian looking tired as he tried to fight back from 3-0 down. Even his impressive returns started to go missing, with Ruud looking unflappable at the other end of the court.

Somehow with Ruud leading 4-2, Djokovic managed to string together not just some winners, but some momentum as he broke back – raising a fist in the air as the crowd took to their feet such was the quality on show after some error-strewn games.

With Ruud’s serving looking solid, he took a 5-4 lead to leave Djokovic serving to stay in the match, and the Serbian player threw in a double fault at match-point down to gift Ruud an incredible victory in Monaco, and a first over his opponent.

“Just super happy, this is a day I will remember for a really long time – beating a world No. 1 is something I’ve never done, beating Novak is something I’ve never done,” Ruud said. “I’m just a little bit in a state of shock, I just didn’t want to let it slip away.

“When he missed the first serve, he’s saved so many break points in these moments with a huge second serve and I thought let it be a double fault. For me, it was nice to see that ball slip away.”

Ruud does not have long to recover from the “shock” of his victory as he will take on Tsitsipas on Sunday for the title. The duo have met this year, with Ruud a straight-sets winner in Los Cabos. They have not met on clay since 2021, when Ruud won in Madrid.

As for the defeated Djokovic and Sinner, the top two seeds have some thinking to do ahead of the continuation of one of the most open and hotly anticipated clay-court swings in recent memory.

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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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‘He surprised me’ – Djokovic breaks Nadal record with ‘ugly’ win over De Minaur

Novak Djokovic progressed to his 77th ATP Masters 1000 semi-final – breaking Rafael Nadal’s record – following a hard-fought 7-5 6-4 win over Alex de Minaur in Monte Carlo.

The world No. 1 advances to his first semi-final in the principality since 2015, and will meet either Casper Ruud or Ugo Humbert in the last four.

Speaking after the match, Djokovic said: “It was tough for both of us; he’s one of the quickest players on tour. He gets a lot of the balls back which 99% of the other players don’t.

“He surprised me with several passing shots, particularly in the second set when I was up a break.

“He said at the net that it was ugly, and in the second set I think it was because we didn’t play at high level. We made a lot of unforced errors, with some consecutive breaks of serve.

“You kind of expect that for clay, but maybe not this many. Again, a win is a win and I’m glad to go through.

“I love this tournament; I know this club very well and I’ve trained for many years here. The last seven or eight years have been tough for me to win two or three matches consecutively, but I’m in another semi and I look forward to it.”

The first set went with serve for the first 11 games, with neither player giving much away in the opening exchanges.

De Minaur was acquitting himself well against the world No. 1 and swatted away a set point in the 10th game, in what was proving to be a bruising first set that had lasted one hour, with the Serbian leading 6-5.

The Australian was showing impressive resolve not to buckle under Djokovic’s pressure, before eventually succumbing after a fourth set point.

De Minaur was starting to lose his range and somehow missed a wide-open court with a routine forehand return, leaving the world No. 11 a set and break down.

However, it was Djokovic’s turn to miss a routine overhead shot, leaving the Australian with two break points.

He prevailed on the first with the Serbian sending a backhand astray, and this set also threatened to go the distance.

A fourth break in five games came and went as Djokovic sent a return long, as De Minaur stayed within range at 3-2.

Djokovic was clearly feeling the strain of this vigorous contest, and despite looking like he may have been pulling away at 4-2, De Minaur responded with an immediate break back at 4-3.

The Serbian was looking more like himself when he claimed an emphatic hold to love, moving one game away from victory at 5-4.

And Djokovic prevailed on the first of two match points to seal a last-four berth as De Minaur netted a return.

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‘A little exchange!’ – Djokovic plays with crowd, sees off Musetti to reach quarters

Novak Djokovic’s recovery from a concerning start to 2024 continued by impressively overcoming Lorenzo Musetti at the Monte Carlo Masters, moving into the quarter-finals with a 7-5 6-3 win.

The world No. 1 recently split with coach Goran Ivansevic and pulled out of the Miami Open to “balance [his] personal and professional schedule” following a shock early exit at Indian Wells.

Djokovic approached the Musetti clash with a “great feeling”, though, after easing to a 6-1 6-2 win over Roman Safiullin earlier in the week, talking up his performance as one of his best in recent years at this tournament.

Indeed, the Serbian has struggled in the clay-court event since lifting the trophy back in 2015. His joint-best performances in that period have been quarter-final appearances in 2017 and 2019.

Last year, he crashed out to Musetti in round three, and the Italian began the contest in the mood to repeat the trick. He took a 2-0 lead in the first set, before going 4-2 up with a lovely drop shot against an off-form Djokovic.

That immediately changed. The 24-time Grand Slam champion wrestled back control by going 5-4 up, with Musetti’s composure completely deserting him – including imploding from a 40-0 lead.

En route, Djokovic had time for some classic trolling of the Italian contingent of the crowd in Monaco, orchestrating the boos and jeers with a smile on his face before breaking serve. Musetti pulled a game back, but lost the two crucial ones as his esteemed opponent took the first set 7-5.

Djokovic quickly took a two-game lead in the second as he looked to close out proceedings, but Musetti continued to cause some problems, closing in to 2-1 and then 4-3 deficits.

But ultimately it proved to be an ideal afternoon for the two-time Monte Carlo winner – a good test against a solid opponent, but one that ended in a victory without being too strenuous on the body, thanks to a 6-3 second set.

Reflecting on the turning point of the match, Djokovic said: “It was a little exchange with the crowd – ever since then, I started to gain momentum. He dropped his level a little bit. He was the better player. This is clay – things can turn around very quickly. A break of serve is not as big an advantage as it is on other surfaces.

“Pleasure in suffering, that’s what play gives you. I don’t think I’m at my top level. He’s a very talented player, particularly on clay. I’m really glad to overcome the challenge and take one day at a time.”

Djokovic – who earlier this week broke Roger Federer’s record as the oldest man to be ranked No. 1 by the ATP, six weeks shy of his 37th birthday – now takes on Alex de Minaur. The Australian progressed to the final eight by defeating Alexei Popyrin 6-3 6-4.

If the 36-year-old now goes on to win the tournament, he will become the first man to be a three-time winner of every Grand Slam, the ATP Finals and all nine ATP Masters events.

Djokovic is also gearing up for a return to this part of the world in May, eyeing a fourth career French Open title as great rival Rafael Nadal continues to struggle with muscle injuries.

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Djokovic kicks off biggest clay season of his career as he targets French Open and Olympic success

Heading into the Monte-Carlo Masters, two-time champion Novak Djokovic (2013, 2015) had spoken of low expectations in terms of landing what would be a record-extending 41st Masters 1000 title.

It only added to the intrigue as to how the top seed would shape up on his return to action, with the crowd on Court Rainier III waiting patiently to see the world No. 1 as early rain delayed the day’s play by two hours.

There were a few shakes of the head here and there as Nole, ever the perfectionist, still managed to lament some wasted break opportunities despite unlocking the Russian’s serve on no fewer than five occasions

There’s no doubt the top seed has several additional gears to move through but overall he admitted he was “very pleased” with what was a very promising and perhaps ominous start to the clay swing for the Serb.

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Djokovic has ‘no clear idea’ on next coach or ‘whether there will be anyone at all’ after Ivanisevic

A fourth Roland-Garros title and a standalone 25th singles major in the sport is clearly on his radar with his preparations in recent years always centred upon peaking for the second Grand Slam of the year in Paris rather than being overly concerned with results in the first few tournaments of the European leg on the red dirt.

Indeed, Djokovic has not gone beyond the quarter-finals here since he lifted the trophy for the second time in 2015, and he has not made it beyond round three since 2019.

It has rarely stopped him from hitting a high level by Rome and being a major contender at Roland-Garros, where he has won two of the last three editions.

However, this year there is a unique difference.

Both Djokovic and his former coach Goran Ivanisevic have made it pretty clear that his priority – even above another major – is that elusive Olympic gold medal, which remains the surprising omission from his glittering CV.

This will be the Serb’s fifth Olympics and he is keenly aware that he has yet to produce his best tennis there.

In 2008 he won bronze after being edged out by eventual gold medallist Rafael Nadal in the last four, while in London in 2012 it was Andy Murray who took down the Serb at the same stage.

A narrow first-round defeat to Juan Martin del Porto prematurely ended his hopes in Rio in 2016 before his most recent attempt in 2020 saw eventual champion Alexander Zverev come from a set down to defeat the red-hot favourite in the last four with a surprise loss to Pablo Carreno Busta then seeing him miss out on a second bronze.

At this summer’s Games in Paris, Djokovic will be 37 and it will surely represent his last chance to strike gold.

That self-imposed pressure, as well as an unfamiliar roadmap to Olympic success, makes it all the more tricky for the Belgrade native.

His attempts to successfully defend a French Open title for the first time will be followed by a transition to grass for Wimbledon, before a rare but highly significant shift back to clay for the Paris Olympics, which will take place at Roland-Garros.

It is not a schedule many players will have navigated before, given that clay to grass is widely perceived to be the most difficult surface adjustment of the season and a sharp reverse back to the dirt could perhaps prove complicated for what will be the first Games on clay since Barcelona in 1992.

With all of that in mind, these early steps are highly significant, and for Djokovic, they are all part of a process to fine-tune his clay-court game for when he feels it matters most.

Next up in Monte-Carlo, he meets Lorenzo Musetti on Thursday at the same third-round stage where the Italian stunned Nole last year.

Pride will no doubt ensure revenge will be on the world No. 1’s agenda – and he is keenly aware he has yet to land a title this year with a record of 9-3 overall – but it is still all short-term in relation to his longer-term goal.

Whether or not success in Monte Carlo materialises in the shape of a third winner’s trophy at the MCCC come Sunday remains to be seen, but he has already suggested anything like that would be a “bonus”.

The growing uncertainty over ‘King of Clay’ Rafael Nadal’s fitness and ability to hit previous unparalleled heights, coupled with the fact NextGen stars Carlos Alcaraz and Jannik Sinner have yet to truly lay down major markers at Roland-Garros means Djokovic will again feel he will be the man to beat on the Parisian red dirt if he can find his optimum level.

It hasn’t been there so far in 2024 but it would take a brave person to bet against a man who has pretty much done it all when it comes to major achievements in the sport.

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