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Tweeners, no-look stunners and epic scrambles: Vote for Hot Shot of the Year

  • Posted: Dec 03, 2025

To mark the end of another thrilling season, ATPTour.com is unveiling our annual ‘Best Of’ series, which will reflect on the most intriguing rivalries, matches, comebacks, upsets and more. Today, we highlight a must-see collection of the top ‘Hot Shots’ from 2025. 

Get ready to take a look back at the season’s most remarkable moments, featuring ATP Tour stars pushing their limits and showing off their incredible court craft.

Throughout the year, 10 players earned Hot Shot of the Month honours. Among the fan-voted winners were Carlos Alcaraz’s jaw-dropping tweener lob in Monte-Carlo in April and Novak Djokovic’s stunning touch in Geneva in May. Now it’s time to select the best of the best in the 2025 Hot Shot of the Year fan vote!

Complete list of ‘Hot Shot of the Month’ winners in 2025:
January: Hubert Hurkacz (United Cup)
February: Tommy Paul (Dallas)
March: Grigor Dimitrov (Indian Wells)
April: Carlos Alcaraz (Monte-Carlo)
May: Novak Djokovic (Geneva)
June: Hamad Medjedovic (Mallorca)
July: Damir Dzumhur (Umag)
August: Julian Cash (Toronto)
September: Shang Juncheng (Beijing)
October: Cameron Norrie (Paris)

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By The Numbers: 2025 ATP Challenger season

  • Posted: Dec 03, 2025

Who recorded the most wins at ATP Challenger level in 2025? Which player earned the most titles? Who were among the teenage stars to make a breakthrough? Find out below as ATPTour.com reviews key facts and figures to remember from the 2025 ATP Challenger season.

Nava Notches Most Match Wins
American Emilio Nava and Canadian Liam Draxl finished with a season-leading 44 match wins at the Challenger level. Nava, who finished the year at a career-high No. 88 in the PIF ATP Rankings, won four titles to cap his career-best season. Draxl claimed his lone title on home soil in Winnipeg and reached six additional finals this season.

Of Nava’s 44 match wins, 42 were on clay. The 23-year-old went on a 19-match winning streak on the surface from mid-March to mid-April, a run during which he won three titles (Asuncion, Concepcion and Sarasota) and finished runner-up in Tallahassee, where Chris Rodesch ended Nava’s streak of 35 consecutive sets won. Nava then added to his title count in September with his triumph in Villa Maria, Argentina. Nava was one win shy of breaking the American record for most Challenger match wins in a season.

Six-Way Tie For Most Titles
Nava and five other players were tied for the most Challenger titles this season. The group includes #NextGenATP talent Nicolai Budkov Kjaer, Borna Coric, Cristian Garin, Jan Choinski and Patrick Kypson. Budkov Kjaer, 19, qualified for his maiden trip to the Next Gen ATP Finals presented by PIF, which runs from 17-21 December in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia. He lifted trophies in Glasgow, Tampere, Astana and Mouilleron le Captif.

Challenger Singles Titles Leaders, 2025

Player Titles
Nicolai Budkov Kjaer 4
Emilio Nava 4
Borna Coric 4
Jan Choinski 4
Patrick Kypson 4
Cristian Garin 4

Fonseca, Engel, Budkov Kjaer Among Teenage Champions
Nine teenagers combined for 17 titles, including last year’s Jeddah champion Joao Fonseca. Just 13 days removed from his triumph in Saudi Arabia, Fonseca won the Canberra Challenger to join Jannik Sinner as the only Next Gen ATP Finals presented by PIF champion to win his ensuing outing. In 2019, Sinner won the Ortisei Challenger the week after lifting the Next Gen ATP Finals presented by PIF crown.

Among the other teenage champions were Justin Engel, Budkov Kjaer, Rafael Jodar, Rei Sakamoto, Martin Landaluce, Alexander Blockx, Dino Prizmic and Matej Dodig.

<img alt=”Joao Fonseca claims his third ATP Challenger Tour trophy.” style=”width:100%;” src=”/-/media/images/news/2025/03/17/00/01/fonseca-phoenixch-2025-trophy2.jpg” />
Credit: ImagenShop Agencia Fotográfica/ATC

Title Leaders By Country
The United States led the way with 23 Challenger titles this year, a single-season record for American players. France was not far behind with its 19 trophies and Argentine players combined for 16 titles. Americans Nava and Kypson led the way for the USA with four trophies each. Kyrian Jacquet led Frenchmen with three titles.

ATP Tour & Challenger Champions
Four players were crowned champion not only on the Challenger circuit, but also the ATP Tour. Fonseca, who won his biggest career title at the ATP 500 in Basel, became the second player since 2014 to win multiple ATP Tour and multiple ATP Challenger titles in the same season. Giovanni Mpetshi Perricard achieved the feat last year. Fonseca won the Canberra and Phoenix Challengers this year, while also triumphing at the ATP 250 in Buenos Aires.

Alexander Bublik, Marton Fucsovics and Luciano Darderi also reached the winner’s circle at the Challenger level as well as the ATP Tour this year.

Bublik, Coric Among Challenger 175 Titlists
Bublik, who won four tour-level titles this season, captured the trophy at the Turin Challenger, one of six Challenger 175 events, the highest Challenger category. Fonseca became the youngest Challenger 175 champion when he won the Phoenix Challenger in March while Aleksandar Kovacevic was victorious in Cap Cana.

In April, during the second week of the Mutua Madrid Open, Borna Coric beat Stan Wawrinka in the Aix-en-Provence final, a three-hour, 11-minute thriller that the Croatian won in a third-set tie-break. That same week, Alex Michelsen won the Estoril Open in Portugal, the American’s first clay-court crown at any level. Giovanni Mpetshi Perricard won on home soil in Bordeaux in May.

ATP Next Gen Accelerator Qualifiers Find Success
Five collegiate players who qualified for the ATP Next Gen Accelerator won Challenger titles, spearheaded by reigning NCAA champion Michael Zheng, who triumphed while using an Accelerator spot in Chicago in August. The next month, Zheng won two consecutive titles in Columbus and Tiburon. He successfully defended his NCAA singles crown in November, representing Columbia University. Colton Smith, Rafael Jodar, Jay Friend and Jack Pinnington Jones also triumphed.

Fast Facts

  • German Justin Engel was the youngest champion of the season, with his victory in Hamburg (18 years, 25 days). Former No. 3 Marin Cilic was the oldest champion of the season, with his triumph in Nottingham (36 years, eight months). Cilic broke Andy Murray’s record for oldest grass-court Challenger titlist.
  • The Hamburg final between Engel and Federico Cina, both 18, was the youngest Challenger championship match since 2003, when Mario Ancic beat Rafael Nadal — also in Hamburg.
  • Rafael Jodar, 19, became the third Spanish teenager to win at least three Challenger titles, joining World No. 1 Carlos Alcaraz and former No. 9 Nicolas Almagro.
  • Dino Prizmic became the second Croatian — alongside Mario Ancic — to win three Challenger titles as a teenager. Rei Sakamoto became the first Japanese teenager to win three Challenger titles.
  • Eliakim Coulibaly became the first champion from Côte d’Ivoire with his memorable victory on home soil in Abidjan, which welcomed the ATP Challenger for the first time this season.
  • Stefano Napolitano was the lowest-ranked champion of the season. The Italian won his hometown tournament in Biella as World No. 847.
  • Australians Finn Reynolds and James Watt partnered for a season-best five doubles titles as a team. Ray Ho won eight doubles titles with six partners.
  • Moldova, Pakistan and Côte d’Ivoire made Challenger debuts in 2025, with the cities of Chisinau, Islamabad and Abidjan hosting tournaments for the first time. In total, 97 different countries/territories have welcomed a Challenger tournament in the history of the circuit.
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Alcaraz & Sinner's Roland Garros classic among best Grand Slam matches of 2025

  • Posted: Dec 02, 2025

To mark the end of another thrilling season, ATPTour.com is unveiling our annual ‘Best Of’ series, which will reflect on the most intriguing rivalries, matches, comebacks, upsets and more. Today we highlight five standout ATP Tour matches (not including Grand Slams) from this season.

The sport’s purest theatrics came alive at this year’s major tournaments, with marquee names stepping into the spotlight under the pressure of five-set combat. Across the four Grand Slams, fans were treated to several standout epics. ATPTour.com has selected five major thrillers to highlight as the ‘Best Slam Matches’ from 2025.

[ATP AWARDS]

5) Wimbledon R4, Norrie d. Jarry 6-3, 7-6(4), 6-7(7), 6-7(5), 6-3
Cameron Norrie’s reaction said it all. Clinching match point on a 15-ball rally, during which the home hope played mostly in defence, Norrie dove to the ground and then laid on his back, gasping for air. It was the look of a man who just had everything thrown at him and then some. And indeed, Nicolas Jarry did just that for the best part of a four-hour, 27-minute fourth-round clash at Wimbledon.

Norrie witnessed Jarry unleash a barrage of 103 winners, but the lefty remained composed and skilfully absorbed the Chilean’s pace before striking back with his own thunderous winners. Norrie let slip a match point on return in the third-set tie-break, but Jarry survived to clinch the set and soon found himself level after also prevailing in the fourth-set breaker. With the roof closed above Court No. 1, however, Norrie channelled the raucous atmosphere and deflated Jarry’s hopes of a two-sets-to-love comeback.

“Honestly I don’t know how I did that,” said Norrie. “Nico played better than me in both tie-breaks [that he won]. I had to keep fighting. I forgot to get my coach a birthday present today, so I had to get the win for him!”

With his five-set win, Norrie became just the fourth British player in the Open Era to reach the quarter-finals at Wimbledon on multiple occasions, joining two-time champion Andy Murray, Tim Henman and Roger Taylor.

<img alt=”Cameron Norrie” style=”width:100%;” src=”/-/media/images/news/2025/07/06/18/31/norrie-wimbledon-2025-sunday3.jpg” />

Photo Credit: Glyn Kirk/AFP via Getty Images

4) US Open R1, Bonzi d. Medvedev 6-3, 7-5, 6-7(5), 0-6, 6-4
The word ‘unprecedented’ is perhaps overused in sports settings, but for the US Open first-round meeting between Benjamin Bonzi and Daniil Medvedev, it might just fit.

Bonzi was on the brink of completing a comfortable upset in the third set when he stepped up to serve on match point at 5-4, 40/30, but an unexpected interruption acted as a catalyst for dramatic scenes.

A photographer ran onto the court just as Bonzi missed his first serve on match point, prompting umpire Greg Allensworth to grant the Frenchman another first serve. Medvedev approached the umpire’s chair to protest and fans seized on the drama to make as much noise as possible, sparking a five-minute delay. The sustained roar created a ‘city-that-never-sleeps’ type atmosphere. Medvedev levelled the match at 5-5 and again, Louis Armstrong Stadium erupted.

A nerve-rattled Bonzi appeared set for a heartbreaker after not winning a game in the fourth set. Medvedev twice held a break lead early in the decider and then let slip five break points at 3-3. Bonzi somehow regrouped amidst the chaos and earned a repeat upset against Medvedev, who the Frenchman also beat in the first round of Wimbledon. “I gave all my heart on the court,” Bonzi said. “I’m very proud of myself, the scenario of the match, the match point in the third. It’s kind of crazy, this match. For me it’s like my best victory ever.”

Medvedev, frustrated with his 1-4 record at the majors this season, shook hands with Bonzi and then tossed six racquets from his bag to fans courtside, signaling the end of his disappointing year at the majors.


Photo Credit: Elsa/Getty Images

3) Roland Garros R2, Fils d. Munar 7-6(3), 7-6(4), 2-6, 0-6, 6-4
In a moment of pure emotion, Arthur Fils ripped off his shirt in celebratory fashion post match and hurled it into the crowd, sparking a tug-of-war among courtside fans. It was a memorable moment of glory for Fils, who struggled to move and looked on the brink of defeat in the latter stages of his Roland Garros second-round battle with Jaume Munar.

The Frenchman relied on his home crowd to pull him through the pain barrier and survive the five-setter, but initially, Fils began the rollercoaster of a match by winning each of the first two sets in a tie-break. Then, things began to change.

“It’s a funny story,” Fils told Tennis Channel after the four-hour, 25-minute victory. “After the end of the second set, I went back to the locker room to change my clothes and I saw [Gabriel] Diallo and he’s saying, ‘It’s a physical battle’! He told me, ‘It’s all right, you can still play five hours like this’. And I listen to him and say, ‘Yeah! I can still play five hours’!

“And then my coach came to give me the drinks and I tell him, ‘It’s okay, I can keep playing for five hours’! 20 minutes later, I was cramping.”

From a break down in the decider — and then trailing 0/40 when serving at 4-4 — Fils played with ultra aggression and dug into his deepest reserves to advance, creating an unforgettable, electric environment inside Court Suzanne-Lenglen.

<img alt=”Arthur Fils” style=”width:100%;” src=”/-/media/images/news/2025/05/29/13/47/fils-rg-2025-thur-1.jpg?w=100%25″ />

Photo Credit: Clive Brunskill/Getty Images

2) Australian Open QFs, Djokovic d. Alcaraz 4-6, 6-4, 6-3, 6-4
For a man who has played more than 1,300 tour-level matches and won 24 major titles, Novak Djokovic’s standard for greatness is higher than anyone’s. Yet even by those lofty standards, the Serbian’s Melbourne clash against Carlos Alcaraz stood apart.

“It’s one of the most epic matches I have played on this court, on any court really,” said the 38-year-old Djokovic during his on-court interview at Rod Laver Arena.

Adding to the intrigue, in the player’s box for Djokovic was his former rival turned coach, Andy Murray, the very man the Serbian beat in the Australian Open final on three occasions. Djokovic and Murray worked together for six months.

Djokovic countered an early physical issue by red-lining the ball for large periods. He received a medical timeout at 4-5 in the first set and returned with his upper left leg taped but did not let the issue get the better of him.

Crushing the ball off both wings to gain the upper hand in brutal baseline exchanges, Djokovic put his body on the line to outlast his younger rival after three hours and 37 minutes, sending the Serbian through to his record-extending 50th major semi-final.

1) Roland Garros Final, Alcaraz d. Sinner 4-6, 6-7(4), 6-4, 7-6(3), 7-6(10-2)
It was not just the best major match of the season, but one of the best of all-time. A five-hour, 29-minute epic that showcased sport at its absolute peak. In the Roland Garros championship match, Alcaraz and Jannik Sinner produced a spectacle that will echo for years, pushing each other to the limit while trading dramatic momentum shifts and otherworldly shotmaking.

Alcaraz rallied from two-sets-to-love down and became the third man in the Open Era to save at least one championship point en route to a Grand Slam trophy. The Spaniard stared down three consecutive championship points at 3-5, 0/40 in the fourth set, yet summoned his trademark grit to hold serve. He then broke Sinner in the next to send Court Philippe-Chatrier into a frenzy.

As the match extended to a fifth set, the tennis world seemed at a standstill, bracing for the next theatrical twist. Alcaraz and Sinner’s top-notch level never wavered, in fact, it only increased. In the first Roland Garros final ever decided by a fifth-set tie-break, a near-perfect Alcaraz rose to the moment. On championship point, he crushed a forehand pass winner on the run and instantly fell on his back in disbelief.

“When the situations are against you, you have to fight and keep fighting,” Alcaraz reflected in his post-tournament press conference. “It is a Grand Slam final. It’s no time to be tired. It’s no time to give up. It’s time to keep fighting, trying to find your moment, your good place again, and just go for it.

“I think the real champions are made in situations when you deal with that pressure, with those situations, in the best way possible.”

<img alt=”Carlos Alcaraz” style=”width:100%;” src=”/-/media/images/news/2025/06/08/19/14/alcaraz-roland-garros-2025-final-celebration.jpg” />

Photo Credit: AFP/Getty Images

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The Fierce Feuds lighting up the latest #NextGenATP wave

  • Posted: Dec 02, 2025

They may be relatively fresh to life on the tennis circuit, but the 2025 Next Gen ATP Finals presented by PIF competitors have wasted little time in striking up Fierce Feuds with their on-court rivals.

Nicolai Budkov Kjaer will be finely tuned to performing on the big stage when he steps on court for his Jeddah debut later this month. The 19-year-old Norwegian finished his regular season by playing ATP Tour events in Stockholm, Vienna (his ATP 500 debut) and Metz, and he opened up to ATPTour.com about some of the deep-rooted relationships that already exist between some of the brightest young stars in men’s tennis.

“Joel Schwaerzler and I travelled to a J500 in Osaka our first ITF junior year,” recalled Budkov Kjaer to ATPTour.com. “We practised a lot together that week and I won the training sets, I remember, but then he beat me 7-6, 7-5 in the final. The year after we won the doubles at Roland Garros together and I feel we both have had a rivalry and friendship in one.

“These days I have a lot of fun with Alexander Blockx, we go to many of the same Challengers. But I was quite far behind all the other Next Gen’s when I was young. Only from the age of 15 did I improve fast and from 16 I started to play the same tournaments as all these other players.”

Even if he ends up only facing opponents with whom he is less familiar than Blockx in Jeddah, Budkov Kjaer is aware of the level he will have to hit if he wants to make an impact at King Abdullah Sports City.

“I think they are all really talented, everyone with their own extraordinary skill set,” said the Norwegian, when asked about the other Jeddah contenders. “History has shown that the Next Gen finals participants can impact tennis the next decade. Some of the players I already know a bit, the others I look forward to meeting for the first time and get to know better – on and off court.”

Another player very familiar with Blockx is his fellow 20-year-old Belgian Gilles Arnaud Bailly. Bailly believes that friendly rivalries with Blockx and other rivals his age have the potential to act as crucial motivators in his career.

“I have a really good relationship with Blockx. We talk a lot and we get on so well,” said Bailly, who hit a career-high No. 201 in the PIF ATP Rankings on 10 November. “Because I am climbing now, I hope we can play more tournaments together. We have a lot of contact together and we play some games on the phone together, so there is a competitive edge there.

“I get on really well with him and I hope to see him and the others more often on Tour and the relationships will develop. I have known Blockx for many years and we keep pushing each other and it is healthy to have that relationship.”

It All Adds Up

Bailly earned his maiden tour-level win on home soil in October by defeating World No. 51 Daniel Altmaier in Brussels after using a Next Gen entry spot to enter qualifying at the indoor ATP 250. He spoke of how important he thinks competing at the top level is for the development of #NextGenATP stars.

“I think the Next Gen entry spots we get given are great,” said Bailly, referring to the Next Gen Accelerator pathway, which offers 20-and-under players ranked in the Top 250 eligibility for one ATP 250 main draw spot and two ATP 250 qualifying event opportunities each season. “The other Next Gen guys are doing so well.

“Blockx, Landaluce, Budkov Kjaer are all doing really well on the ATP Tour and Challenger Tour. It is great from the ATP to give us chances, otherwise it would be tough to play some events, so that support is helpful. I like seeing the other young players do well, it gives you further drive.”

Watch Highlights Of Bailly’s Breakthrough ATP Tour Win:

One player that can attest to Bailly’s theory is Nishesh Basavareddy. Having made his Next Gen ATP Finals presented by PIF in 2024 alongside a familiar face from his junior days, Learner Tien, Basavareddy then faced his friend and rival for the first time at Tour-level on one of the biggest stages of them all: in the first round at Wimbledon in July.

“The first time I met Learner was when I was six,” Basavareddy told ATPTour.com. “We played at the Little Mo Regionals in San Diego, and I remember those matches being real battles. I also played Alex [Michelsen] when I was seven and he was already a year older than me. We crossed paths at junior tournaments all the time, and over the years, we’ve not only competed but become close friends.”

Basavareddy and Tien did not play each other in Jeddah a year ago, when the latter went on to reach the championship match. With Tien having triumphed in straight sets in their Wimbledon clash and both players now having qualified once again for the Next Gen ATP Finals presented by PIF, the 20-year-old Basavareddy will be seeking a revenge win.

“I think our games match up pretty well,” Basavareddy told ATPTour.com when asked about Tien ahead of their Wimbledon clash. “We are both not the biggest servers, but we have a lot of baseline rallies. The [two Challenger] matches [we played in 2024] were quite long, especially the first one in a final. He’s a counterpuncher, he makes a lot of balls, and he’s really smart out there, so he makes it tough on you.”

This is the sixth feature of our Next Gen ATP series Next in Line. Read our other stories here:

Wimbledon dreams, Nishikori’s run & Vinci’s courtside lessons: Next Gen stars share memories

Next Steps: How Tien, Basavareddy & Engel are making the leap
Learning from Legends: Nadal, Cilic & Ram inspiring #NextGenATP stars
Fuel for the future: Inside the mindset of the best youngsters
The voices driving Landaluce & Cina to the top

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