Scouting Report: Medvedev Returns In Geneva, Norrie Heads Lyon Field

A pair of clay-court events just 112 kilometres apart host the action this week on the ATP Tour, with Geneva and Lyon the venues for a doubleheader in Western Europe.

World No. 2 Daniil Medvedev plays his first tournament since March at the Gonet Geneva Open, with Casper Ruud and Dominic Thiem also competing in a strong field in Switzerland. Cameron Norrie is the top seed at the Open Parc Auvergne-Rhone-Alpes Lyon, where Gael Monfils leads an exciting group of French players seeking home success.

ATPTour.com looks ahead at five things to watch at each event.

View Draws: Geneva | Lyon

FIVE THINGS TO WATCH IN GENEVA
1) Medvedev Returns: World No. 2 Medvedev returns to competitive action for the first time since March after a layoff due to a hernia procedure. The top seed makes his debut in Geneva as he chases a first title of the year at the ATP 250 event, where he opens against Richard Gasquet or John Millman. Medvedev is a 13-time tour-level titlist, but arrives in Switzerland still hunting a maiden crown on clay.

2) Ruud Defends Title: Casper Ruud’s European clay-court season sparked into life with a semi-final run in Rome this week, a strong response from the Norwegian after he won just four matches across his four previous tournaments. Despite his patchy form, the World No. 10’s pedigree on clay is not in doubt ⁠— he is chasing a seventh tour-level title on the surface in Geneva, where he is the defending champion.

3) Thiem Chases Winning Feeling: Former World No. 3 Thiem may be 0-4 since making his comeback on Tour in April from a wrist injury, but the Austrian has shown signs of improvement in every match he has played. Despite defeat in a tough opener against Fabio Fognini in Rome last week, Thiem will feel capable of a deep run on debut in Geneva as he tries to recapture the level that has earned him 10 tour-level titles on clay and two championship match appearances at Roland Garros.

4) Shapovalov, Opelka Challenge: Third seed Denis Shapovalov was back to his exciting best during a quarter-final run in Rome, the highlight of which was a third-round victory over Rafael Nadal. The Canadian will hope to build on that performance as he hunts a second ATP Tour title. He came close to that goal in Geneva last year, reaching the final on tournament debut before falling to Ruud.

Reilly Opelka enjoyed a less-successful first appearance in Geneva in 2021, losing his first-round match to Pablo Cuevas, but the fourth-seeded American arrives in Switzerland this year a tour-level clay-court titlist after lifting the trophy in Houston in April. Opelka is 0-3 on the European clay since then, but the American’s huge serve remains the perfect weapon to power him back to form, no matter the surface.

5) Mektic/Pavic Lead Doubles Field: Nikola Mektic and Mate Pavic are the top-seeds in the doubles draw, with the Croatian pairing making their debut at the Tennis Club de Geneve. A strong field also includes Jamie Murray and Bruno Soares, the British-Brazilian second seeds hunting a first clay-court title together, while third seeds Marcelo Arevalo and Jean-Julien Rojer are chasing a third tour-level crown of the year.

FOLLOW THIS WEEK’S ACTION

📺 TV Schedule
🎾 Watch Live On Tennis TV
📱 Follow Live Scores On ATP Tour App
📧 Sign Up For Newsletters

FIVE THINGS TO WATCH IN LYON
1) Norrie Top Seed: World No. 11 Norrie has a strong record in Lyon. The Briton made the semi-finals on debut in 2018 and went one better last year, reaching the championship match at the ATP 250 event before falling to Stefanos Tsitsipas. Norrie’s solid early-season form propelled him into the Top 10 of the Pepperstone ATP Rankings for the first time on 4 April. Can he bounce back from a second-round defeat to Marin Cilic in Rome with a maiden clay-court title this week?

2) Carreno Busta Threat: One of the most consistent performers on Tour, World No. 18 Pablo Carreno Busta is seeded second as he prepares for his Lyon debut. The Spaniard will bid to put disappointing early exits at the Masters 1000 events in Madrid and Rome behind him with a deep run in Lyon as he chases a first title since securing his maiden ATP 500 crown at the Hamburg European Open last July.

ATP WTA Live App

3) Monfils Leads Home Hopes: Gael Monfils was resurgent in the early stages of 2022, picking up an 11th tour-level title in Adelaide in January before reaching the quarter-finals of the Australian Open. Lyon will be just the second event of the 35-year-old’s European clay season, however, and he has won only one match in two prior appearances at the ATP 250 event.

Monfils is an all-court player capable of strong performances on clay, but the 11-time titlist has won only one title on the red dirt, back in 2005. Can home support spur the third seed on to another this week?

4) Tsonga’s Farewell Tour: Jo-Wilfried Tsonga prepares for the penultimate tournament of his career at an event where he was the inaugural winner in 2017. The 18-time tour-level titlist will retire after Roland Garros. The 37-year-old faces Marrakech finalist Alex Molcan in the opening round in Lyon, with Tsonga chasing a first win on Tour since Marseille in March.

You May Also Like:

Tsonga, Simon & Pouille Headline Roland Garros Wild Cards

Ugo Humbert, Benjamin Bonzi, Arthur Rinderknech, Lucas Pouille, Arthur Rinderknech and Adrian Mannarino will also look to channel home support as they bid to emulate countrymen Tsonga and 2019 champion Benoit Paire in lifting the Lyon trophy.

5) Rune Flying High: The exciting #NextGenATP Dane Holger Rune returns to competitive action for the first time since clinching his maiden ATP Tour title in Munich two weeks ago. Rune’s exploits in Germany saw him jump into the Top 50 of the Pepperstone ATP Rankings for the first time but the 19-year-old faces a tough opening opponent in Rinderknech, who won the pair’s only previous meeting in Kitzbuhel last year.

Ukraine crisis relief

Scouting Report: Medvedev Returns In Geneva, Norrie Heads Lyon Field

A pair of clay-court events just 112 kilometres apart host the action this week on the ATP Tour, with Geneva and Lyon the venues for a doubleheader in Western Europe.

World No. 2 Daniil Medvedev plays his first tournament since March at the Gonet Geneva Open, with Casper Ruud and Dominic Thiem also competing in a strong field in Switzerland. Cameron Norrie is the top seed at the Open Parc Auvergne-Rhone-Alpes Lyon, where Gael Monfils leads an exciting group of French players seeking home success.

ATPTour.com looks ahead at five things to watch at each event.

View Draws: Geneva | Lyon

FIVE THINGS TO WATCH IN GENEVA
1) Medvedev Returns: World No. 2 Medvedev returns to competitive action for the first time since March after a layoff due to a hernia procedure. The top seed makes his debut in Geneva as he chases a first title of the year at the ATP 250 event, where he opens against Richard Gasquet or John Millman. Medvedev is a 13-time tour-level titlist, but arrives in Switzerland still hunting a maiden crown on clay.

2) Ruud Defends Title: Casper Ruud’s European clay-court season sparked into life with a semi-final run in Rome this week, a strong response from the Norwegian after he won just four matches across his four previous tournaments. Despite his patchy form, the World No. 10’s pedigree on clay is not in doubt ⁠— he is chasing a seventh tour-level title on the surface in Geneva, where he is the defending champion.

3) Thiem Chases Winning Feeling: Former World No. 3 Thiem may be 0-4 since making his comeback on Tour in April from a wrist injury, but the Austrian has shown signs of improvement in every match he has played. Despite defeat in a tough opener against Fabio Fognini in Rome last week, Thiem will feel capable of a deep run on debut in Geneva as he tries to recapture the level that has earned him 10 tour-level titles on clay and two championship match appearances at Roland Garros.

4) Shapovalov, Opelka Challenge: Third seed Denis Shapovalov was back to his exciting best during a quarter-final run in Rome, the highlight of which was a third-round victory over Rafael Nadal. The Canadian will hope to build on that performance as he hunts a second ATP Tour title. He came close to that goal in Geneva last year, reaching the final on tournament debut before falling to Ruud.

Reilly Opelka enjoyed a less-successful first appearance in Geneva in 2021, losing his first-round match to Pablo Cuevas, but the fourth-seeded American arrives in Switzerland this year a tour-level clay-court titlist after lifting the trophy in Houston in April. Opelka is 0-3 on the European clay since then, but the American’s huge serve remains the perfect weapon to power him back to form, no matter the surface.

5) Mektic/Pavic Lead Doubles Field: Nikola Mektic and Mate Pavic are the top-seeds in the doubles draw, with the Croatian pairing making their debut at the Tennis Club de Geneve. A strong field also includes Jamie Murray and Bruno Soares, the British-Brazilian second seeds hunting a first clay-court title together, while third seeds Marcelo Arevalo and Jean-Julien Rojer are chasing a third tour-level crown of the year.

FOLLOW THIS WEEK’S ACTION

📺 TV Schedule
🎾 Watch Live On Tennis TV
📱 Follow Live Scores On ATP Tour App
📧 Sign Up For Newsletters

FIVE THINGS TO WATCH IN LYON
1) Norrie Top Seed: World No. 11 Cameron Norrie has a strong record in Lyon. The Briton made the semi-finals on debut in 2018 and went one better last year, reaching the championship match at the ATP 250 event before falling to Stefanos Tsitsipas. Norrie’s solid early-season form propelled him into the Top 10 of the Pepperstone ATP Rankings for the first time on 4 April. Can he bounce back from a second-round defeat to Marin Cilic in Rome with a maiden clay-court title this week?

2) Carreno Busta Threat: One of the most consistent performers on Tour, World No. 18 Pablo Carreno Busta is seeded second as he prepares for his Lyon debut. The Spaniard will bid to put disappointing early exits at the ATP Masters 1000 events in Madrid and Rome behind him with a deep run in Lyon as he chases a first title since securing his maiden ATP 500 crown at the Hamburg European Open last July.

ATP WTA Live App

3) Monfils Leads Home Hopes: Gael Monfils was resurgent in the early stages of 2022, picking up an 11th tour-level title in Adelaide in January before reaching the quarter-finals of the Australian Open. Lyon will be just the second event of the 35-year-old’s European clay season, however, and he has won only one match in two prior appearances at the ATP 250 event.

Monfils is an all-court player capable of strong performances on clay, but the 11-time titlist has won only one title on the red dirt, back in 2005. Can home support spur the third seed on to another this week?

4) Tsonga’s Farewell Tour: Jo-Wilfried Tsonga prepares for the penultimate tournament of his career at an event where he was the inaugural winner in 2017. The 18-time tour-level titlist will retire after Roland Garros. The 37-year-old faces Marrakech finalist Alex Molcan in the opening round in Lyon, with Tsonga chasing a first win on Tour since Marseille in March.

You May Also Like:

Tsonga, Simon & Pouille Headline Roland Garros Wild Cards

Ugo Humbert, Benjamin Bonzi, Arthur Rinderknech, Lucas Pouille, Arthur Rinderknech and Adrian Mannarino will also look to channel home support as they bid to emulate countrymen Tsonga and 2019 champion Benoit Paire in lifting the Lyon trophy.

5) Rune Flying High: The exciting #NextGenATP Dane Holger Rune returns to competitive action for the first time since clinching his maiden ATP Tour title in Munich two weeks ago. Rune’s exploits in Germany saw him jump into the Top 50 of the Pepperstone ATP Rankings for the first time but the 19-year-old faces a tough opening opponent in Rinderknech, who won the pair’s only previous meeting in Kitzbuhel last year.

Ukraine crisis relief

Scouting Report: Medvedev Returns In Geneva, Norrie Heads Lyon Field

A pair of clay-court events just 112 kilometres apart host the action this week on the ATP Tour, with Geneva and Lyon the venues for a doubleheader in Western Europe.

World No. 2 Daniil Medvedev plays his first tournament since March at the Gonet Geneva Open, with Casper Ruud and Dominic Thiem also competing in a strong field in Switzerland. Cameron Norrie is the top seed at the Open Parc Auvergne-Rhone-Alpes Lyon, where Gael Monfils leads an exciting group of French players seeking home success.

ATPTour.com looks ahead at five things to watch at each event.

View Draws: Geneva | Lyon

FIVE THINGS TO WATCH IN GENEVA
1) Medvedev Returns: World No. 2 Medvedev returns to competitive action for the first time since March after a layoff due to a hernia procedure. The top seed makes his debut in Geneva as he chases a first title of the year at the ATP 250 event, where he opens against Richard Gasquet or John Millman. Medvedev is a 13-time tour-level titlist, but arrives in Switzerland still hunting a maiden crown on clay.

2) Ruud Defends Title: Casper Ruud’s European clay-court season sparked into life with a semi-final run in Rome this week, a strong response from the Norwegian after he won just four matches across his four previous tournaments. Despite his patchy form, the World No. 10’s pedigree on clay is not in doubt ⁠— he is chasing a seventh tour-level title on the surface in Geneva, where he is the defending champion.

3) Thiem Chases Winning Feeling: Former World No. 3 Thiem may be 0-4 since making his comeback on Tour in April from a wrist injury, but the Austrian has shown signs of improvement in every match he has played. Despite defeat in a tough opener against Fabio Fognini in Rome last week, Thiem will feel capable of a deep run on debut in Geneva as he tries to recapture the level that has earned him 10 tour-level titles on clay and two championship match appearances at Roland Garros.

4) Shapovalov, Opelka Challenge: Third seed Denis Shapovalov was back to his exciting best during a quarter-final run in Rome, the highlight of which was a third-round victory over Rafael Nadal. The Canadian will hope to build on that performance as he hunts a second ATP Tour title. He came close to that goal in Geneva last year, reaching the final on tournament debut before falling to Ruud.

Reilly Opelka enjoyed a less-successful first appearance in Geneva in 2021, losing his first-round match to Pablo Cuevas, but the fourth-seeded American arrives in Switzerland this year a tour-level clay-court titlist after lifting the trophy in Houston in April. Opelka is 0-3 on the European clay since then, but the American’s huge serve remains the perfect weapon to power him back to form, no matter the surface.

5) Mektic/Pavic Lead Doubles Field: Nikola Mektic and Mate Pavic are the top-seeds in the doubles draw, with the Croatian pairing making their debut at the Tennis Club de Geneve. A strong field also includes Jamie Murray and Bruno Soares, the British-Brazilian second seeds hunting a first clay-court title together, while third seeds Marcelo Arevalo and Jean-Julien Rojer are chasing a third tour-level crown of the year.

FOLLOW THIS WEEK’S ACTION

📺 TV Schedule
🎾 Watch Live On Tennis TV
📱 Follow Live Scores On ATP Tour App
📧 Sign Up For Newsletters

FIVE THINGS TO WATCH IN LYON
1) Norrie Top Seed: World No. 11 Cameron Norrie has a strong record in Lyon. The Briton made the semi-finals on debut in 2018 and went one better last year, reaching the championship match at the ATP 250 event before falling to Stefanos Tsitsipas. Norrie’s solid early-season form propelled him into the Top 10 of the Pepperstone ATP Rankings for the first time on 4 April. Can he bounce back from a second-round defeat to Marin Cilic in Rome with a maiden clay-court title this week?

2) Carreno Busta Threat: One of the most consistent performers on Tour, World No. 18 Pablo Carreno Busta is seeded second as he prepares for his Lyon debut. The Spaniard will bid to put disappointing early exits at the ATP Masters 1000 events in Madrid and Rome behind him with a deep run in Lyon as he chases a first title since securing his maiden ATP 500 crown at the Hamburg European Open last July.

ATP WTA Live App

3) Monfils Leads Home Hopes: Gael Monfils was resurgent in the early stages of 2022, picking up an 11th tour-level title in Adelaide in January before reaching the quarter-finals of the Australian Open. Lyon will be just the second event of the 35-year-old’s European clay season, however, and he has won only one match in two prior appearances at the ATP 250 event.

Monfils is an all-court player capable of strong performances on clay, but the 11-time titlist has won only one title on the red dirt, back in 2005. Can home support spur the third seed on to another this week?

4) Tsonga’s Farewell Tour: Jo-Wilfried Tsonga prepares for the penultimate tournament of his career at an event where he was the inaugural winner in 2017. The 18-time tour-level titlist will retire after Roland Garros. The 37-year-old faces Marrakech finalist Alex Molcan in the opening round in Lyon, with Tsonga chasing a first win on Tour since Marseille in March.

You May Also Like:

Tsonga, Simon & Pouille Headline Roland Garros Wild Cards

Ugo Humbert, Benjamin Bonzi, Arthur Rinderknech, Lucas Pouille, Arthur Rinderknech and Adrian Mannarino will also look to channel home support as they bid to emulate countrymen Tsonga and 2019 champion Benoit Paire in lifting the Lyon trophy.

5) Rune Flying High: The exciting #NextGenATP Dane Holger Rune returns to competitive action for the first time since clinching his maiden ATP Tour title in Munich two weeks ago. Rune’s exploits in Germany saw him jump into the Top 50 of the Pepperstone ATP Rankings for the first time but the 19-year-old faces a tough opening opponent in Rinderknech, who won the pair’s only previous meeting in Kitzbuhel last year.

Ukraine crisis relief

Scouting Report: Medvedev Returns In Geneva, Norrie Heads Lyon Field

A pair of clay-court events just 112 kilometres apart host the action this week on the ATP Tour, with Geneva and Lyon the venues for a doubleheader in Western Europe.

World No. 2 Daniil Medvedev plays his first tournament since March at the Gonet Geneva Open, with Casper Ruud and Dominic Thiem also competing in a strong field in Switzerland. Cameron Norrie is the top seed at the Open Parc Auvergne-Rhone-Alpes Lyon, where Gael Monfils leads an exciting group of French players seeking home success.

ATPTour.com looks ahead at five things to watch at each event.

View Draws: Geneva | Lyon

FIVE THINGS TO WATCH IN GENEVA
1) Medvedev Returns: World No. 2 Medvedev returns to competitive action for the first time since March after a layoff due to a hernia procedure. The top seed makes his debut in Geneva as he chases a first title of the year at the ATP 250 event, where he opens against Richard Gasquet or John Millman. Medvedev is a 13-time tour-level titlist, but arrives in Switzerland still hunting a maiden crown on clay.

2) Ruud Defends Title: Casper Ruud’s European clay-court season sparked into life with a semi-final run in Rome this week, a strong response from the Norwegian after he won just four matches across his four previous tournaments. Despite his patchy form, the World No. 10’s pedigree on clay is not in doubt ⁠— he is chasing a seventh tour-level title on the surface in Geneva, where he is the defending champion.

3) Thiem Chases Winning Feeling: Former World No. 3 Thiem may be 0-4 since making his comeback on Tour in April from a wrist injury, but the Austrian has shown signs of improvement in every match he has played. Despite defeat in a tough opener against Fabio Fognini in Rome last week, Thiem will feel capable of a deep run on debut in Geneva as he tries to recapture the level that has earned him 10 tour-level titles on clay and two championship match appearances at Roland Garros.

4) Shapovalov, Opelka Challenge: Third seed Denis Shapovalov was back to his exciting best during a quarter-final run in Rome, the highlight of which was a third-round victory over Rafael Nadal. The Canadian will hope to build on that performance as he hunts a second ATP Tour title. He came close to that goal in Geneva last year, reaching the final on tournament debut before falling to Ruud.

Reilly Opelka enjoyed a less-successful first appearance in Geneva in 2021, losing his first-round match to Pablo Cuevas, but the fourth-seeded American arrives in Switzerland this year a tour-level clay-court titlist after lifting the trophy in Houston in April. Opelka is 0-3 on the European clay since then, but the American’s huge serve remains the perfect weapon to power him back to form, no matter the surface.

5) Mektic/Pavic Lead Doubles Field: Nikola Mektic and Mate Pavic are the top-seeds in the doubles draw, with the Croatian pairing making their debut at the Tennis Club de Geneve. A strong field also includes Jamie Murray and Bruno Soares, the British-Brazilian second seeds hunting a first clay-court title together, while third seeds Marcelo Arevalo and Jean-Julien Rojer are chasing a third tour-level crown of the year.

FOLLOW THIS WEEK’S ACTION

📺 TV Schedule
🎾 Watch Live On Tennis TV
📱 Follow Live Scores On ATP Tour App
📧 Sign Up For Newsletters

FIVE THINGS TO WATCH IN LYON
1) Norrie Top Seed: World No. 11 Cameron Norrie has a strong record in Lyon. The Briton made the semi-finals on debut in 2018 and went one better last year, reaching the championship match at the ATP 250 event before falling to Stefanos Tsitsipas. Norrie’s solid early-season form propelled him into the Top 10 of the Pepperstone ATP Rankings for the first time on 4 April. Can he bounce back from a second-round defeat to Marin Cilic in Rome with a maiden clay-court title this week?

2) Carreno Busta Threat: One of the most consistent performers on Tour, World No. 18 Pablo Carreno Busta is seeded second as he prepares for his Lyon debut. The Spaniard will bid to put disappointing early exits at the ATP Masters 1000 events in Madrid and Rome behind him with a deep run in Lyon as he chases a first title since securing his maiden ATP 500 crown at the Hamburg European Open last July.

ATP WTA Live App

3) Monfils Leads Home Hopes: Gael Monfils was resurgent in the early stages of 2022, picking up an 11th tour-level title in Adelaide in January before reaching the quarter-finals of the Australian Open. Lyon will be just the second event of the 35-year-old’s European clay season, however, and he has won only one match in two prior appearances at the ATP 250 event.

Monfils is an all-court player capable of strong performances on clay, but the 11-time titlist has won only one title on the red dirt, back in 2005. Can home support spur the third seed on to another this week?

4) Tsonga’s Farewell Tour: Jo-Wilfried Tsonga prepares for the penultimate tournament of his career at an event where he was the inaugural winner in 2017. The 18-time tour-level titlist will retire after Roland Garros. The 37-year-old faces Marrakech finalist Alex Molcan in the opening round in Lyon, with Tsonga chasing a first win on Tour since Marseille in March.

You May Also Like:

Tsonga, Simon & Pouille Headline Roland Garros Wild Cards

Ugo Humbert, Benjamin Bonzi, Arthur Rinderknech, Lucas Pouille, Arthur Rinderknech and Adrian Mannarino will also look to channel home support as they bid to emulate countrymen Tsonga and 2019 champion Benoit Paire in lifting the Lyon trophy.

5) Rune Flying High: The exciting #NextGenATP Dane Holger Rune returns to competitive action for the first time since clinching his maiden ATP Tour title in Munich two weeks ago. Rune’s exploits in Germany saw him jump into the Top 50 of the Pepperstone ATP Rankings for the first time but the 19-year-old faces a tough opening opponent in Rinderknech, who won the pair’s only previous meeting in Kitzbuhel last year.

Ukraine crisis relief

Scouting Report: Medvedev Returns In Geneva, Norrie Heads Lyon Field

A pair of clay-court events just 112 kilometres apart host the action this week on the ATP Tour, with Geneva and Lyon the venues for a doubleheader in Western Europe.

World No. 2 Daniil Medvedev plays his first tournament since March at the Gonet Geneva Open, with Casper Ruud and Dominic Thiem also competing in a strong field in Switzerland. Cameron Norrie is the top seed at the Open Parc Auvergne-Rhone-Alpes Lyon, where Gael Monfils leads an exciting group of French players seeking home success.

ATPTour.com looks ahead at five things to watch at each event.

View Draws: Geneva | Lyon

FIVE THINGS TO WATCH IN GENEVA
1) Medvedev Returns: World No. 2 Medvedev returns to competitive action for the first time since March after a layoff due to a hernia procedure. The top seed makes his debut in Geneva as he chases a first title of the year at the ATP 250 event, where he opens against Richard Gasquet or John Millman. Medvedev is a 13-time tour-level titlist, but arrives in Switzerland still hunting a maiden crown on clay.

2) Ruud Defends Title: Casper Ruud’s European clay-court season sparked into life with a semi-final run in Rome this week, a strong response from the Norwegian after he won just four matches across his four previous tournaments. Despite his patchy form, the World No. 10’s pedigree on clay is not in doubt ⁠— he is chasing a seventh tour-level title on the surface in Geneva, where he is the defending champion.

3) Thiem Chases Winning Feeling: Former World No. 3 Thiem may be 0-4 since making his comeback on Tour in April from a wrist injury, but the Austrian has shown signs of improvement in every match he has played. Despite defeat in a tough opener against Fabio Fognini in Rome last week, Thiem will feel capable of a deep run on debut in Geneva as he tries to recapture the level that has earned him 10 tour-level titles on clay and two championship match appearances at Roland Garros.

4) Shapovalov, Opelka Challenge: Third seed Denis Shapovalov was back to his exciting best during a quarter-final run in Rome, the highlight of which was a third-round victory over Rafael Nadal. The Canadian will hope to build on that performance as he hunts a second ATP Tour title. He came close to that goal in Geneva last year, reaching the final on tournament debut before falling to Ruud.

Reilly Opelka enjoyed a less-successful first appearance in Geneva in 2021, losing his first-round match to Pablo Cuevas, but the fourth-seeded American arrives in Switzerland this year a tour-level clay-court titlist after lifting the trophy in Houston in April. Opelka is 0-3 on the European clay since then, but the American’s huge serve remains the perfect weapon to power him back to form, no matter the surface.

5) Mektic/Pavic Lead Doubles Field: Nikola Mektic and Mate Pavic are the top-seeds in the doubles draw, with the Croatian pairing making their debut at the Tennis Club de Geneve. A strong field also includes Jamie Murray and Bruno Soares, the British-Brazilian second seeds hunting a first clay-court title together, while third seeds Marcelo Arevalo and Jean-Julien Rojer are chasing a third tour-level crown of the year.

FOLLOW THIS WEEK’S ACTION

📺 TV Schedule
🎾 Watch Live On Tennis TV
📱 Follow Live Scores On ATP Tour App
📧 Sign Up For Newsletters

FIVE THINGS TO WATCH IN LYON
1) Norrie Top Seed: World No. 11 Cameron Norrie has a strong record in Lyon. The Briton made the semi-finals on debut in 2018 and went one better last year, reaching the championship match at the ATP 250 event before falling to Stefanos Tsitsipas. Norrie’s solid early-season form propelled him into the Top 10 of the Pepperstone ATP Rankings for the first time on 4 April. Can he bounce back from a second-round defeat to Marin Cilic in Rome with a maiden clay-court title this week?

2) Carreno Busta Threat: One of the most consistent performers on Tour, World No. 18 Pablo Carreno Busta is seeded second as he prepares for his Lyon debut. The Spaniard will bid to put disappointing early exits at the ATP Masters 1000 events in Madrid and Rome behind him with a deep run in Lyon as he chases a first title since securing his maiden ATP 500 crown at the Hamburg European Open last July.

ATP WTA Live App

3) Monfils Leads Home Hopes: Gael Monfils was resurgent in the early stages of 2022, picking up an 11th tour-level title in Adelaide in January before reaching the quarter-finals of the Australian Open. Lyon will be just the second event of the 35-year-old’s European clay season, however, and he has won only one match in two prior appearances at the ATP 250 event.

Monfils is an all-court player capable of strong performances on clay, but the 11-time titlist has won only one title on the red dirt, back in 2005. Can home support spur the third seed on to another this week?

4) Tsonga’s Farewell Tour: Jo-Wilfried Tsonga prepares for the penultimate tournament of his career at an event where he was the inaugural winner in 2017. The 18-time tour-level titlist will retire after Roland Garros. The 37-year-old faces Marrakech finalist Alex Molcan in the opening round in Lyon, with Tsonga chasing a first win on Tour since Marseille in March.

You May Also Like:

Tsonga, Simon & Pouille Headline Roland Garros Wild Cards

Ugo Humbert, Benjamin Bonzi, Arthur Rinderknech, Lucas Pouille, Arthur Rinderknech and Adrian Mannarino will also look to channel home support as they bid to emulate countrymen Tsonga and 2019 champion Benoit Paire in lifting the Lyon trophy.

5) Rune Flying High: The exciting #NextGenATP Dane Holger Rune returns to competitive action for the first time since clinching his maiden ATP Tour title in Munich two weeks ago. Rune’s exploits in Germany saw him jump into the Top 50 of the Pepperstone ATP Rankings for the first time but the 19-year-old faces a tough opening opponent in Rinderknech, who won the pair’s only previous meeting in Kitzbuhel last year.

Ukraine crisis relief

Scouting Report: Medvedev Returns In Geneva, Norrie Heads Lyon Field

A pair of clay-court events just 112 kilometres apart hosts the action this week on the ATP Tour, with Geneva and Lyon the venues for a doubleheader in Western Europe.

World No. 2 Daniil Medvedev plays his first tournament since March at the Gonet Geneva Open, with Casper Ruud and Dominic Thiem also competing in a strong field in Switzerland. Cameron Norrie is the top seed at the Open Parc Auvergne-Rhone-Alpes Lyon, where Gael Monfils leads an exciting group of French players seeking home success.

ATPTour.com looks ahead at five things to watch at each event.

View Draws: Geneva | Lyon

FIVE THINGS TO WATCH IN GENEVA
1) Medvedev Returns: World No. 2 Medvedev returns to competitive action for the first time since March after a layoff due to a hernia procedure. The top seed makes his debut in Geneva as he chases a first title of the year at the ATP 250 event, where he opens against Richard Gasquet or John Millman. Medvedev is a 13-time tour-level titlist, but arrives in Switzerland still hunting a maiden crown on clay.

2) Ruud Defends Title: Casper Ruud’s European clay-court season sparked into life with a semi-final run in Rome this week, a strong response from the Norwegian after he won just four matches across his four previous tournaments. Despite his patchy form, the World No. 10’s pedigree on clay is not in doubt ⁠— he is chasing a seventh tour-level title on the surface in Geneva, where he is the defending champion.

3) Thiem Chases Winning Feeling: Former World No. 3 Thiem may be 0-4 since making his comeback on Tour in April from a wrist injury, but the Austrian has shown signs of improvement in every match he has played. Despite defeat in a tough opener against Fabio Fognini in Rome last week, Thiem will feel capable of a deep run on debut in Geneva as he tries to recapture the level that has earned him 10 tour-level titles on clay and two championship match appearances at Roland Garros.

4) Shapovalov, Opelka Challenge: Third seed Denis Shapovalov was back to his exciting best during a quarter-final run in Rome, the highlight of which was a third-round victory over Rafael Nadal. The Canadian will hope to build on that performance as he hunts a second ATP Tour title. He came close to that goal in Geneva last year, reaching the final on tournament debut before falling to Ruud.

Reilly Opelka enjoyed a less-successful first appearance in Geneva in 2021, losing his first-round match to Pablo Cuevas, but the fourth-seeded American arrives in Switzerland this year a tour-level clay-court titlist after lifting the trophy in Houston in April. Opelka is 0-3 on the European clay since then, but the American’s huge serve remains the perfect weapon to power him back to form, no matter the surface.

5) Mektic/Pavic Lead Doubles Field: Nikola Mektic and Mate Pavic are the top-seeds in the doubles draw, with the Croatian pairing making their debut at the Tennis Club de Geneve. A strong field also includes Jamie Murray and Bruno Soares, the British-Brazilian second seeds hunting a first clay-court title together, while third seeds Marcelo Arevalo and Jean-Julien Rojer are chasing a third tour-level crown of the year.

FOLLOW THIS WEEK’S ACTION

📺 TV Schedule
🎾 Watch Live On Tennis TV
📱 Follow Live Scores On ATP Tour App
📧 Sign Up For Newsletters

FIVE THINGS TO WATCH IN LYON
1) Norrie Top Seed: World No. 11 Cameron Norrie has a strong record in Lyon. The Briton made the semi-finals on debut in 2018 and went one better last year, reaching the championship match at the ATP 250 event before falling to Stefanos Tsitsipas. Norrie’s solid early-season form propelled him into the Top 10 of the Pepperstone ATP Rankings for the first time on 4 April. Can he bounce back from a second-round defeat to Marin Cilic in Rome with a maiden clay-court title this week?

2) Carreno Busta Threat: One of the most consistent performers on Tour, World No. 18 Pablo Carreno Busta is seeded second as he prepares for his Lyon debut. The Spaniard will bid to put disappointing early exits at the ATP Masters 1000 events in Madrid and Rome behind him with a deep run in Lyon as he chases a first title since securing his maiden ATP 500 crown at the Hamburg European Open last July.

ATP WTA Live App

3) Monfils Leads Home Hopes: Gael Monfils was resurgent in the early stages of 2022, picking up an 11th tour-level title in Adelaide in January before reaching the quarter-finals of the Australian Open. Lyon will be just the second event of the 35-year-old’s European clay season, however, and he has won only one match in two prior appearances at the ATP 250 event.

Monfils is an all-court player capable of strong performances on clay, but the 11-time titlist has won only one title on the red dirt, back in 2005. Can home support spur the third seed on to another this week?

4) Tsonga’s Farewell Tour: Jo-Wilfried Tsonga prepares for the penultimate tournament of his career at an event where he was the inaugural winner in 2017. The 18-time tour-level titlist will retire after Roland Garros. The 37-year-old faces Marrakech finalist Alex Molcan in the opening round in Lyon, with Tsonga chasing a first win on Tour since Marseille in March.

You May Also Like:

Tsonga, Simon & Pouille Headline Roland Garros Wild Cards

Ugo Humbert, Arthur Rinderknech, Lucas Pouille, Hugo Gaston and Adrian Mannarino will also look to channel home support as they bid to emulate countrymen Tsonga and 2019 champion Benoit Paire in lifting the Lyon trophy.

5) Rune Flying High: The exciting #NextGenATP Dane Holger Rune returns to competitive action for the first time since clinching his maiden ATP Tour title in Munich two weeks ago. Rune’s exploits in Germany saw him jump into the Top 50 of the Pepperstone ATP Rankings for the first time but the 19-year-old faces a tough opening opponent in Rinderknech, who won the pair’s only previous meeting in Kitzbuhel last year.

Ukraine crisis relief

Scouting Report: Nadal, Djokovic & Tsitsipas Lead Rome Field

Editor’s Note: This article was edited after Carlos Alcaraz said he will not be competing in Rome.

The world’s top players arrive at the Internazionali BNL d’Italia for the third and final clay-court ATP Masters 1000 event of the season in Rome.

Ten-time champion Rafael Nadal and five-time champion Novak Djokovic headline the field at the Foro Italico, while Alexander Zverev and Stefanos Tsitsipas are also leading contenders in the Italian capital.

ATPTour.com looks at 10 things to watch this week.

VIEW DRAWS: SINGLES | DOUBLES

1) Rafa Defends Crown: Nadal hit the ground running on his return after six weeks out with a rib injury at the Mutua Madrid Open, but the legendary Spaniard’s run was halted by countryman Alcaraz in a thrilling quarter-final clash. Nadal will look to up his level further at a tournament where he has the most titles (10) and most match wins (68), a record that still makes him the man to beat in the Italian capital.

2) Novak Shoots For Six: Djokovic may have suffered disappointment at the final hurdle against Nadal in 2021 but the World No. 1 is a five-time champion himself in the Italian capital. The Serbian was back to somewhere near his best in Madrid after a stuttering start to the season, and he will be aiming to improve an outstanding 59-10 match record in Rome as he chases a maiden title of 2022. 

You May Also Like:

Internazionali BNL d’Italia 2022: Draws, Dates, History & All You Need To Know

3) Zverev To Rule In Rome?: Second seed Zverev has plenty of fond memories from Rome to motivate him at the Foro Italico, with the World No. 3 having won his maiden Masters 1000 title there in 2017. The big-serving German comes into the tournament having recaptured some of his best form in reaching the semi-finals in Madrid this week after a difficult start to 2022.

4) Tsitsipas 2019 Finalist: Zverev’s semi-final opponent in Spain is Tsitsipas, and the Greek will be seeded fourth as he heads to Rome. The Greek has already enjoyed Masters 1000 success on clay this year, having triumphed at April’s Rolex Monte-Carlo Masters, and the World No. 5 will hope his impressive form on the red dirt allows him to better his 2019 run to the semi-finals in the Italian capital.

FOLLOW THIS WEEK’S ACTION

📺 TV Schedule
🎾 Watch Live On Tennis TV
📱 Follow Live Scores On ATP Tour App
📧 Sign Up For Newsletters

5) Sinner Leads Italian Charge: Local fans will have some strong contenders to get behind despite the absence of Italian No. 1 Matteo Berrettini. Jannik Sinner has had a solid 2022 so far, reaching four tour-level quarter-finals, but the 10th seed has never been past the third round in Rome. Meanwhile Fabio Fognini reached the last eight at the Foro Italico in 2018, and the 34-year-old remains a threat to anyone on Tour on his day.

6) Sonego To Shine Again?: Lorenzo Sonego had only reached one Masters 1000 quarter-final prior to the 2021 event in Rome but upset Gael Monfils, Dominic Thiem and Andrey Rublev on the way to the semi-finals. The World No. 28 has struggled at times this season and owns a 10-13 match record for the year, and he will look to home support for inspiration once again as he faces Denis Shapovalov in the opening round.

ATP WTA Live App

7) Ruud & Rublev Threat: Fifth seed Casper Ruud has won just four matches in a disappointing clay season so far after reaching his maiden Masters 1000 final in Miami in March, but the Norwegian enjoys the Rome clay. He reached the third round as a qualifier in 2019 before a run to the semi-finals a year later was only stopped by eventual champion Djokovic. In contrast Andrey Rublev’s brutal baseline hitting has lit up the red dirt this year, but the sixth seed is yet to lift a Masters 1000 title. Could his time come in Rome?

8) Mektic/Pavic Defend Doubles Crown: Nikola Mektic and Mate Pavic won nine tour-level titles in 2021, one of which was a third Masters 1000 crown of the year in Rome, but the third seeds are yet to lift a trophy in 2022. Top seeds Rajeev Ram and Joe Salisbury seek to back up their maiden clay-court title together won in Monte Carlo in April, while second seeds Marcel Granollers and Horacio Zeballos look to replicate their 2020 title run at the Foro italico.

9) Stars Pull Double Duty: A host of singles stars join the doubles draw with Andrey Rublev and Karen Khachanov set for a blockbuster opener against No. 1-ranked pairing Ram and Salisbury. Reilly Opelka and Tommy Paul, John Isner and Diego Schwartzman, and Grigor Dimitrov and Hubert Hurkacz make up other strong pairings taking to the doubles court this week in Italy.

10) Diego In Rome: While Diego Schwartzman lost against Felix Auger-Aliassime in his opening match in Rome last year, he has plenty of happy memories at the Foro Italico. In 2020, the Argentine stormed to the final behind wins against John Millman, Hurkacz, Nadal and Shapovalov. Seeded 12th this edition, Schwartzman will begin his tournament against in-form Serbian Miomir Kecmanovic.

Ukraine crisis relief

Scouting Report: Nadal, Djokovic & Alcaraz Lead Rome Field

The world’s top players arrive at the Internazionali BNL d’Italia for the third and final clay-court ATP Masters 1000 event of the season in Rome.

Ten-time champion Rafael Nadal and five-time champion Novak Djokovic headline the field at the Foro Italico, while Alexander Zverev, Stefanos Tsitsipas and Carlos Alcaraz are also strong contenders in the Italian capital.

ATPTour.com looks at 10 things to watch this week.

VIEW DRAWS: SINGLES | DOUBLES

1) Rafa Defends Crown: Nadal hit the ground running on his return after six weeks out with a rib injury at the Mutua Madrid Open, but the legendary Spaniard’s run was halted by countryman Alcaraz in a thrilling quarter-final clash. Nadal will look to up his level further at a tournament where he has the most titles (10) and most match wins (68), a record that still makes him the man to beat in the Italian capital.

2) Novak Shoots For Six: Djokovic may have suffered disappointment at the final hurdle against Nadal in 2021 but the World No. 1 is a five-time champion himself in the Italian capital. The Serbian was back to somewhere near his best in Madrid after a stuttering start to the season, and he will be aiming to improve an outstanding 59-10 match record in Rome as he chases a maiden title of 2022.

3) Alcaraz To Make Debut: The red-hot 19-year-old has hit milestone after milestone this season. The Spaniard notched a first Masters 1000 crown in Miami in March, with another trophy in Barcelona helping to push him into the Top 10 of the Pepperstone ATP Rankings for the first time on 25 April.

Although a debutant in Rome, Alcaraz will arrive in the Italian capital a fully-fledged title contender and may also by then have already become a two-time Masters 1000 champion, with the Spaniard playing in Sunday’s championship match in Madrid.

You May Also Like:

Internazionali BNL d’Italia 2022: Draws, Dates, History & All You Need To Know

4) Zverev To Rule In Rome?: Second seed Zverev has plenty of fond memories from Rome to motivate him at the Foro Italico, with the World No. 3 having won his maiden Masters 1000 title there in 2017. The big-serving German comes into the tournament having recaptured some of his best form in reaching the semi-finals in Madrid this week after a difficult start to 2022.

5) Tsitsipas 2019 Finalist: Zverev’s semi-final opponent in Spain is Tsitsipas, and the Greek will be seeded fourth as he heads to Rome. The Greek has already enjoyed Masters 1000 success on clay this year, having triumphed at April’s Rolex Monte-Carlo Masters, and the World No. 5 will hope his impressive form on the red dirt allows him to better his 2019 run to the semi-finals in the Italian capital.

FOLLOW THIS WEEK’S ACTION

📺 TV Schedule
🎾 Watch Live On Tennis TV
📱 Follow Live Scores On ATP Tour App
📧 Sign Up For Newsletters

6) Sinner Leads Italian Charge: Local fans will have some strong contenders to get behind despite the absence of Italian No. 1 Matteo Berrettini. Jannik Sinner has had a solid 2022 so far, reaching four tour-level quarter-finals, but the 10th seed has never been past the third round in Rome. Meanwhile Fabio Fognini reached the last eight at the Foro Italico in 2018, and the 34-year-old remains a threat to anyone on Tour on his day.

7) Sonego To Shine Again?: Lorenzo Sonego had only reached one Masters 1000 quarter-final prior to the 2021 event in Rome but upset Gael Monfils, Dominic Thiem and Andrey Rublev on the way to the semi-finals. The World No. 28 has struggled at times this season and owns a 10-13 match record for the year, and he will look to home support for inspiration once again as he faces Denis Shapovalov in the opening round.

ATP WTA Live App

8) Ruud & Rublev Threat: Fifth seed Casper Ruud has won just four matches in a disappointing clay season so far after reaching his maiden Masters 1000 final in Miami in March, but the Norwegian enjoys the Rome clay. He reached the third round as a qualifier in 2019 before a run to the semi-finals a year later was only stopped by eventual champion Djokovic. In contrast Andrey Rublev’s brutal baseline hitting has lit up the red dirt this year, but the sixth seed is yet to lift a Masters 1000 title. Could his time come in Rome?

9) Mektic/Pavic Defend Doubles Crown: Nikola Mektic and Mate Pavic won nine tour-level titles in 2021, one of which was a third Masters 1000 crown of the year in Rome, but the third seeds are yet to lift a trophy in 2022. Top seeds Rajeev Ram and Joe Salisbury seek to back up their maiden clay-court title together won in Monte Carlo in April, while second seeds Marcel Granollers and Horacio Zeballos look to replicate their 2020 title run at the Foro italico.

10) Stars Pull Double Duty: A host of singles stars join the doubles draw with Andrey Rublev and Karen Khachanov set for a blockbuster opener against No. 1-ranked pairing Ram and Salisbury. Reilly Opelka and Tommy Paul, John Isner and Diego Schwartzman, and Grigor Dimitrov and Hubert Hurkacz make up other strong pairings taking to the doubles court this week in Italy.

Ukraine crisis relief

Scouting Report: Nadal, Djokovic & Alcaraz Lead Rome Field

The world’s top players arrive at the Internazionali BNL d’Italia for the third and final clay-court ATP Masters 1000 event of the season in Rome.

Ten-time champion Rafael Nadal and five-time champion Novak Djokovic headline the field at the Foro Italico, while Alexander Zverev, Stefanos Tsitsipas and Carlos Alcaraz are also strong contenders in the Italian capital.

ATPTour.com looks at 10 things to watch this week.

VIEW DRAWS: SINGLES | DOUBLES

1) Rafa Defends Crown: Nadal hit the ground running on his return after six weeks out with a rib injury at the Mutua Madrid Open, but the legendary Spaniard’s run was halted by countryman Alcaraz in a thrilling quarter-final clash. Nadal will look to up his level further at a tournament where he has the most titles (10) and most match wins (68), a record that still makes him the man to beat in the Italian capital.

2) Novak Shoots For Six: Djokovic may have suffered disappointment at the final hurdle against Nadal in 2021 but the World No. 1 is a five-time champion himself in the Italian capital. The Serbian was back to somewhere near his best in Madrid after a stuttering start to the season, and he will be aiming to improve an outstanding 59-10 match record in Rome as he chases a maiden title of 2022.

3) Alcaraz To Make Debut: The red-hot 19-year-old has hit milestone after milestone this season. The Spaniard notched a first Masters 1000 crown in Miami in March, with another trophy in Barcelona helping to push him into the Top 10 of the Pepperstone ATP Rankings for the first time on 25 April.

Although a debutant in Rome, Alcaraz will arrive in the Italian capital a fully-fledged title contender and may also by then have already become a two-time Masters 1000 champion, with the Spaniard playing in Sunday’s championship match in Madrid.

You May Also Like:

Internazionali BNL d’Italia 2022: Draws, Dates, History & All You Need To Know

4) Zverev To Rule In Rome?: Second seed Zverev has plenty of fond memories from Rome to motivate him at the Foro Italico, with the World No. 3 having won his maiden Masters 1000 title there in 2017. The big-serving German comes into the tournament having recaptured some of his best form in reaching the semi-finals in Madrid this week after a difficult start to 2022.

5) Tsitsipas 2019 Finalist: Zverev’s semi-final opponent in Spain is Tsitsipas, and the Greek will be seeded fourth as he heads to Rome. The Greek has already enjoyed Masters 1000 success on clay this year, having triumphed at April’s Rolex Monte-Carlo Masters, and the World No. 5 will hope his impressive form on the red dirt allows him to better his 2019 run to the semi-finals in the Italian capital.

FOLLOW THIS WEEK’S ACTION

📺 TV Schedule
🎾 Watch Live On Tennis TV
📱 Follow Live Scores On ATP Tour App
📧 Sign Up For Newsletters

6) Sinner Leads Italian Charge: Local fans will have some strong contenders to get behind despite the absence of Italian No. 1 Matteo Berrettini. Jannik Sinner has had a solid 2022 so far, reaching four tour-level quarter-finals, but the 10th seed has never been past the third round in Rome. Meanwhile Fabio Fognini reached the last eight at the Foro Italico in 2018, and the 34-year-old remains a threat to anyone on Tour on his day.

7) Sonego To Shine Again?: Lorenzo Sonego had only reached one Masters 1000 quarter-final prior to the 2021 event in Rome but upset Gael Monfils, Dominic Thiem and Andrey Rublev on the way to the semi-finals. The World No. 28 has struggled at times this season and owns a 10-13 match record for the year, and he will look to home support for inspiration once again as he faces Denis Shapovalov in the opening round.

ATP WTA Live App

8) Ruud & Rublev Threat: Fifth seed Casper Ruud has won just four matches in a disappointing clay season so far after reaching his maiden Masters 1000 final in Miami in March, but the Norwegian enjoys the Rome clay. He reached the third round as a qualifier in 2019 before a run to the semi-finals a year later was only stopped by eventual champion Djokovic. In contrast Andrey Rublev’s brutal baseline hitting has lit up the red dirt this year, but the sixth seed is yet to lift a Masters 1000 title. Could his time come in Rome?

9) Mektic/Pavic Defend Doubles Crown: Nikola Mektic and Mate Pavic won nine tour-level titles in 2021, one of which was a third Masters 1000 crown of the year in Rome, but the third seeds are yet to lift a trophy in 2022. Top seeds Rajeev Ram and Joe Salisbury seek to back up their maiden clay-court title together won in Monte Carlo in April, while second seeds Marcel Granollers and Horacio Zeballos look to replicate their 2020 title run at the Foro italico.

10) Stars Pull Double Duty: A host of singles stars join the doubles draw with Andrey Rublev and Karen Khachanov set for a blockbuster opener against No. 1-ranked pairing Ram and Salisbury. Reilly Opelka and Tommy Paul, John Isner and Diego Schwartzman, and Grigor Dimitrov and Hubert Hurkacz make up other strong pairings taking to the doubles court this week in Italy.

Ukraine crisis relief