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Granollers/Martinez send Spain to title match at Davis Cup Finals

  • Posted: Nov 22, 2025

Marcel Granollers and Pedro Martinez sent Spain to the title match at the Davis Cup Finals on Saturday, when they earned a hard-fought 6-2, 3-6, 6-3 deciding doubles rubber win against Germany’s Kevin Krawietz and Tim Puetz.

Earlier, Alexander Zverev had levelled the tie for Germany in Bologna with a 7-6(2) 7-6(5) victory against Jaume Munar after Pablo Carreno Busta had beaten Jan-Lennard Struff 6-4 7-6(6) to give Spain the lead.

With the doubles left to decide the semi-final tie, Granollers and Martinez stepped up to send Spain through. They crucially saved one break point when serving for the match at 5-3, 30/40 in the third set, earning victory on their first match point to spark jubilant scenes of celebration among the Spanish team.

In the first match of the day, Carreno Busta saved five consecutive set points in the second set against Struff, rallying from 1/6 behind in the tie-break to give his nation the lead after one hour and 46 minutes.

It All Adds Up

The No. 3 player in the PIF ATP Rankings Zverev clubbed 32 winners, including 13 aces, past Munar but ultimately his victory was in vain. Zverev ends his season holding a 57-25 record, according to the Infosys ATP Win/Loss Index.

Spain is in its first Davis Cup final since lifting the trophy in 2019. The former champion will play two-time defending champion Italy in Sunday’s final.

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Celebrating Ivan Dodig's retirement: 'I always gave everything'

  • Posted: Nov 21, 2025

On 6 February 2011, Ivan Dodig hit an ace to defeat Michael Berrer and claim his first ATP Tour singles title in front of his home fans in Zagreb. Or so the Croatian thought.

Dodig threw his racquet into the crowd and walked up to the net thinking the match was over. Chair umpire Cedric Mourier, now an ATP Supervisor, told the righty it had been a let.

“I was like, ‘No way’. I could not believe it,” Dodig told ATPTour.com. “It was a hectic situation because I threw the racquet and I needed to ask the guy to please give me back the racquet. I lost the next point, and it was Deuce. Somehow, I managed to finish the match. I was lucky. I always was thinking about it. Imagine that I lost that match, it would have been a disaster.”

Instead, Dodig closed out a 6-3, 6-4 victory for his lone tour-level singles trophy and in the 15 years since has crafted a memorable career in singles and doubles. The proud 40-year-old, who reached No. 29 in the PIF ATP Rankings, No. 2 in the PIF ATP Doubles Rankings and won 24 tour-level doubles titles, has retired.

“In the beginning of the year, I was considering my options. And then through the year, after a couple of months, I already decided and the people close to me knew it would be my last year,” Dodig said. “But I didn’t put so much attention into that, and now at the end, in the past couple of months, I decided and finally started to share the good friends that this would be my last year.”

Having accomplished a lot in his career in both singles and doubles, Dodig simply felt that it was a good time to hang up his racquet.

“Usually players break Top 100 at the age 20, 21. I broke Top 100 [when I was] almost 24. But after that, I stayed there for a long time, for 15, 16 years,” Dodig said. “I achieved a lot of things, and played so much tennis in singles and doubles. So it’s a quite long career for me, and I’m really happy about it and really had a good time all these years.”

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Dodig is from Medjugorje, Bosnia and Herzegovina, the same small town as former World No. 3 Marin Cilic. Dodig is nearly four years older than Cilic, but they grew up together and are best friends.

Their town is known more for religious pilgrimages than athletics. When Dodig and Cilic were growing up, the only tennis player they could watch on television was Goran Ivanisevic.

“That’s how we all [fell] in love with tennis and we started to dream,” Dodig recalled.

Cilic moved to Zagreb at an early age to chase his dreams and later trained under the tutelage of Bob Brett. He reached great heights in the sport, winning a major title at the 2014 US Open, but never let slip his relationship with Dodig. They even won the silver medal together in men’s doubles at the Tokyo Olympics.

“We have to be proud. It’s a special story and a special gift. We got from the beginning to the end and [spent] a lot of time sitting together talking about it,” Dodig said. “It’s special and not so many people know, but the journey we have was different from so many others and we’re proud of that. We motivated so many kids around here, around this region, to play tennis. And even now to see so many kids playing tennis because of us, it’s a great thing.”

 
 
 
 
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A post shared by Ivan Dodig (@ivan_dodig)

The same year he triumphed in Zagreb, Dodig stunned then-World No. 2 Rafael Nadal 1-6, 7-6(5), 7-6(5) at the ATP Masters 1000 event in Canada. The Croatian also earned multiple wins against Jo-Wilfried Tsonga, Milos Raonic and Cilic, and beat the likes of Kei Nishikori.

“I had a great career in singles, I have to admit,” Dodig said. “So many good wins, great memories.”

Throughout his singles career, Dodig excelled in doubles. Eventually, his back began to trouble him and he played his final tour-level singles match in July 2017, transitioning to doubles.

The Croatian won three men’s doubles majors, claiming glory at Roland Garros in 2015 with Marcelo Melo, at the 2021 Australian Open with Filip Polasek and at 2023 Roland Garros with Austin Krajicek. Dodig won six Masters 1000 titles and competed in the Nitto ATP Finals nine times with four different partners: Melo, Marcel Granollers, Polasek and Krajicek.

“I think I made a great, great decision at that time,” Dodig said. “I extended my career for another seven, eight years in doubles and enjoyed amazing success in doubles with great partners.”

Krajicek, with whom Dodig won Year-End ATP Doubles No. 1 presented by PIF honours in 2023, said: “What a tremendous career he’s had. He’s been someone that I’ve looked up to for a long time, and obviously I have a tremendous amount of respect for him. [It has been a privilege] to be a small part of his journey and play alongside him and really get to feel like he’s almost family to me. We had a great time playing together and had a lot of success. It’s awesome to see someone like Ivan, who’s been such a a role model for so many young guys coming into the sport, and to uphold such a high standard of work ethic and grit his whole career has been really fun to watch. I always had a tremendous amount of respect for Ivan and of course wish him nothing but the best moving forward.”

For Dodig’s part, the 40-year-old hopes he has made a difference for the next generation.

“I hope that through my sports career that I motivated some kids to find a way and to search for their dreams. Hopefully they can also look to achieve their dreams and if I motivated them a little bit, I’m very proud and happy,” Dodig said. “I always gave everything on the tennis court — for myself, for my family, for the community and for the people who love tennis and will try to be professional. I gave everything into it and I’m very happy and satisfied.”

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Heroic Cobolli saves 7 MPs, sends Italy past Belgium into third straight Davis Cup final

  • Posted: Nov 21, 2025

Flavio Cobolli and Matteo Berrettini propelled Italy into its third straight Davis Cup final on Friday in Bologna, where Cobolli delivered a show-stopping performance to close out a 2-0 victory over Belgium.

After Berrettini had given Italy the early advantage with a composed 6-3, 6-4 win over Raphael Collignon, Cobolli turned the evening into a spectacle inside the SuperTennis Arena. The 23-year-old survived seven match points in a nerve-shredding 6-3, 6-7(5), 7-6(15) victory against Zizou Bergs that sent the home fans into a frenzy.

“It’s really tough to say something about this match,” Cobolli said. “We fought for our country, for this win, but in the end I realised my dream. We are in the final now… I played for all of my team, my family, and it’s one of the best days of my life.”

Cobolli ripped his shirt to shreds in celebration after winning a marathon deciding-set tie-break — featuring all seven match-point saves — that sent two-time defending champions Italy through and avenged his lone Davis Cup defeat, inflicted by Bergs during last year’s round-robin stage. He now leads the Belgian 2-1 in the pair’s Lexus ATP Head2Head series.

Berrettini, the former No. 6 player in the PIF ATP Rankings, earned his his seventh consecutive singles win at the event, building on his pivotal role in Italy’s title-winning campaign last year. They are now the first country to reach three consecutive finals since Australia in 2001.

Italy awaits the winner of Saturday’s semi-final clash between Spain and Germany, both of whom reached this stage after winning crucial doubles deciders. Riding a 13-tie winning streak, Italy is aiming to become the first country to win three consecutive Davis Cup titles since USA in 1971.

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Sinner, Alcaraz & the return of a rare youth-led No. 1 race

  • Posted: Nov 21, 2025

The 2025 ATP Tour season ended with a statistical clarity rarely seen in the modern era: Only Jannik Sinner, 24, and Carlos Alcaraz, 22, held the No. 1 spot in the PIF ATP Rankings at any point.

With both players under 25 and splitting the sport’s four majors between them, the season stands as a clear marker of a new phase in the ATP No. 1 Club. Their year-long control at the top places 2025 among the youngest dual-player No. 1 seasons in ATP history.

That distinction becomes clearer in the context of previous decades. Since the inception of the PIF ATP Rankings in 1973, only a small number of seasons have featured all No. 1s being under age 25, with 2025 entering alongside some of the sport’s most formative generational handovers.

ATP Tour seasons when all No. 1 players were under age 25 (since 1973) 

 Year  Players (age)
 1975  Connors (23)
 1976  Connors (24)
 1980  Borg (24), McEnroe (21)
 1984  Lendl (21), McEnroe (24)
 1993  Courier (23), Sampras (22)
 1994  Sampras (23)
 1995  Agassi (25), Sampras (24)
 2002  Hewitt (21) 
 2004  Federer (23), Roddick (21)
 2005  Federer (24) 
 2025  Sinner (24), Alcaraz (22)

*Ages listed reflect the oldest age each player reached while holding the No. 1 spot during that season

What links these seasons is how sharply they highlight moments of transition — periods in which emerging champions took command of the sport earlier than expected. The 2025 season fits squarely in that lineage, echoing shifts like Bjorn Borg – John McEnroe in 1980 or the early Pete Sampras years in the 1990s.

The comparison with the Big Three era adds essential perspective. Roger Federer, Rafael Nadal, and Novak Djokovic produced one of the most dramatic and competitive Lexus ATP Head2Head trilogies in tennis history, but their rivalry rarely intersected at No. 1 while they were still so young.

It All Adds Up

Federer holds the record for the most consecutive weeks at No. 1 (237 between 2004-08), Nadal finally broke through in 2008 at age 22, and Djokovic took over in 2011 at 24 — but sustained, two-player battles for No. 1 between them did not arrive until largely after age 25.

That is what sets 2025 apart. Having two multi-major champions contesting the No. 1 spot throughout the same season at ages 22 and 24 is statistically rare and historically significant. The last time a pair this young shared control at the summit was over two decades ago in 2004, when 23-year-old Federer and 21-year-old Andy Roddick dominated.

Rivalries such as that of Sinner-Alcaraz have historically signalled pivotal shifts in the sport. Borg and McEnroe defined the early 1980s with intense battles that often decided the No. 1 ranking, while Andre Agassi and Sampras carried the torch in the 1990s with contrasting styles and personalities shaping multiple seasons at the top.

*Research for this story was provided by Jon Jeraj

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Dennis Novak announces retirement: 'More than I could ever dream of'

  • Posted: Nov 20, 2025

Austrian Dennis Novak announced his retirement from professional tennis this week. The 32-year-old, who reached a career-high No. 85 in 2020, shared the news on Instagram.

“Hi everybody, just wanted to let you know that my professional career [has] come to an end,” wrote Novak. “Reaching No. 85 in the world, playing 17 times in the Davis Cup for Austria and all Grand Slam main draws is more than I could ever dream of!! 🙏”

Novak reached two tour-level quarter-finals in his career and earned as many Top 20 victories. His best major result was a third-round run at Wimbledon in 2018. Looking ahead to his next chapter, Novak shared a message of sincere gratitude in his retirement post.

“Thanks to my parents and my family for giving me the chance to go after my dream of [being] a professional tennis player and for supporting me my whole life without any doubt!!! ❤️🫶🏼,” he added. “Thanks to all my coaches all over the years for your work with me and your trust!!

“Thanks to my girlfriend who had my back all over the years and never complained when I was gone for so many weeks! I love you ❤️

“I‘m truly grateful and thankful for everything I could experience on this journey and for all the people I got to know all over the years and made friends for life!!”

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Granollers/Martinez hold firm to earn Spain Davis Cup SF spot

  • Posted: Nov 20, 2025

An experienced Spain team dug deep to oust the young talents of Czechia in a thrilling Davis Cup quarter-final tie on Thursday afternoon in Bologna.

After Jakub Mensik and Jaume Munar had each earned singles wins for their respective countries to leave the last-eight encounter at 1-1, Marcel Granollers and Pedro Martinez edged Tomas Machac and Mensik 7-6(8), 7-6(8) in an enthralling doubles rubber to seal victory for Spain.

The 39-year-old Granollers, a former No. 1 in the PIF ATP Doubles Rankings, and 28-year-old Martinez saved three set points in the first-set tie-break and two set points in the second-set tie-break for their decisive victory. It was finally sealed when #NextGenATP Mensik fired a double fault under pressure at 8/9 in the second-set tie-break, ensuring Spain advanced to a semi-final clash on Saturday against second seed Germany or Argentina.

The stage had been set for the doubles showdown after 20-year-old Mensik eased past Pablo Carreno Busta 7-5, 6-4 in the opening singles rubber, before Jaume Munar downed Jiri Lehecka 6-3, 6-4 to level the tie. A six-time Davis Cup champion, Spain is into the semi-finals for the first time since lifting its most recent title in 2019.

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The 2025 ATP Awards Nominees Are…

  • Posted: Nov 20, 2025

Nominees have been revealed today for the two player categories and Coach of the Year in the 2025 ATP Awards.

The past three winners of the Stefan Edberg Sportsmanship Award – Grigor Dimitrov (2024), Carlos Alcaraz (2023) and Casper Ruud (2022) – are once again up for the honour, with Felix Auger-Aliassime rounding out the list of nominees. Meanwhile, Jack Draper, Joao Fonseca, Jakub Mensik and Valentin Vacherot will vie for the new Breakthrough of the Year award. 

In the Coach of the Year category, the nominees are: Benjamin Balleret (Valentin Vacherot), Darren Cahill & Simone Vagnozzi (Jannik Sinner), Juan Carlos Ferrero & Samuel Lopez (Carlos Alcaraz), Frederic Fontang (Felix Auger-Aliassime) and Bryan Shelton (Ben Shelton).

Nominees for Breakthrough of the Year and the Stefan Edberg Sportsmanship Award are determined by an International Tennis Writers’ Association (ITWA) vote. Coach of the Year nominees are selected through first-round voting by ATP coach members.

For the first time, members of the exclusive ATP No. 1 Club – the 29 current and former players to have reached World No. 1 – will decide the winners of Breakthrough of the Year and the Stefan Edberg Sportsmanship Award. The Coach of the Year winner is selected by fellow ATP coach members.

ATP Awards winners, including Fans’ Favourite, will be revealed during Awards week, starting 8 December. Fans can vote for their favourite singles player and doubles team through Friday, 21 November. 

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View the complete list of 2025 ATP Awards nominees:

Breakthrough of the Year
Breakthrough of the Year goes to the player who made the biggest breakthrough on the ATP Tour this season, with consideration given to milestone wins, significant jumps in the PIF ATP Rankings and first ATP Tour titles. Whilst there are no age restrictions, the award is aimed at Next Gen and young players.

Jack Draper
Joao Fonseca
Jakub Mensik
Valentin Vacherot
 
Stefan Edberg Sportsmanship Award
The Stefan Edberg Sportsmanship Award goes to the player who, throughout the year, conducted himself at the highest level of professionalism and integrity, who competed with his fellow players with the utmost spirit of fairness, and who promoted the game through his off-court activities.

Carlos Alcaraz 
Felix Auger-Aliassime
Grigor Dimitrov 
Casper Ruud
 
Coach of the Year
The Coach of the Year award goes to the coach who helped guide their player to a higher level of performance during the year.

Benjamin Balleret (Valentin Vacherot)
Darren Cahill & Simone Vagnozzi (Jannik Sinner)
Juan Carlos Ferrero & Samuel Lopez (Carlos Alcaraz)
Frederic Fontang (Felix Auger-Aliassime)
Bryan Shelton (Ben Shelton)

 

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