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Auger-Aliassime downs two-time champ Zverev, sets Alcaraz SF clash at Nitto ATP Finals

  • Posted: Nov 14, 2025

Felix Auger-Aliassime completed a barnstorming group-stage turnaround in style on Friday night at the Nitto ATP Finals, where he surged past Alexander Zverev to book a semi-final spot in Turin.

The Canadian overcame two-time Nitto ATP Finals titlist Zverev 6-4, 7-6(4) in a straight shootout to finish second behind Jannik Sinner in Bjorn Borg Group. Auger-Aliassime lost his first three sets of the week to slip towards an early exit at Inalpi Arena, but after notching a comeback victory against Ben Shelton and then dispatching Zverev, he will enter his semi-final against Carlos Alcaraz full of confidence.

“This is a high-value tournament for players,” said Auger-Aliassime, when asked about the Alcaraz clash. “It’s like a grand finale and when you have a look at the list of champions, there have been many No. 1s. You want to be in the final but I’ll have to go through a great player to do that. I will take my chance if I have it.”

By downing Zverev for his 50th tour-level win of the season, according to the Infosys ATP Win/Loss Index, Auger-Aliassime became the second Canadian to reach the last four at the Nitto ATP Finals after Milos Raonic in 2016. He also completed a clean sweep against Zverev for 2025, having also prevailed in the pair’s third-round meeting at the US Open, although the German still leads 6-4 in their Lexus ATP Head2Head series.

Against Zverev, Auger-Aliassime withstood pressure from his opponent on serve before striking late in the first set. He saved break points at 30/40 in both the fifth and ninth games and then capitalised on Zverev’s drop of level in the 10th game to clinch the opener: Although the German saved three set points from 4-5, 0/40, Auger-Aliassime produced a stunning cross-court forehand on his fourth opportunity to move ahead.

Watch Felix’s Firework Forehand To Clinch First Set:

In a nerve-wracking encounter, both players struggled for consistency in the second set. Zverev appeared frustrated with his struggles on a court where he lifted the trophy in 2021 and frequently gestured to his team, while Auger-Aliassime was wasteful with his openings on return.

Despite having let slip three break points earlier in the set, however, the Canadian maintained his composure to deliver a rock-solid tie-break showing. From 5/4, he earned consecutive minibreaks via Zverev errors to wrap a two-hour, seven-minute victory.

“It was a great first set. He was getting a few chances but I came up with big serves to save them,” said Auger-Aliassime said, who is up three spots No. 5 in the PIF ATP Live Rankings. “The first set was very solid and the start of the second set was, too. I had a lot of chances.

“When that happens you need to focus on the present but you’re aware of missed opportunities, so the match got a little tense from that moment. But I was able to hold serve and in the tie-break it was tight till the end.”

Auger-Aliassime is chasing his fourth ATP Tour trophy of 2025 this week in Turin, having triumphed in Adelaide, Montpellier and Brussels already this season. He has now won a Tour-leading 85 matches indoors this decade, five more than second-placed Sinner on that list.

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ATP star-turned-TV personality Matsuoka on Alcaraz & Sinner’s ‘new tennis’

  • Posted: Nov 14, 2025

The ATP Tour is in the midst of an exciting new era, and Shuzo Matsuoka knows it.

Renowned in his native Japan as a sports commentator, television presenter and motivational speaker, Matsuoka is well-qualified to comment on the current state of tennis: He is a former No. 46 in the PIF ATP Rankings, a one-time ATP Tour champion, and was a quarter-finalist at Wimbledon in 1995.

Despite having commentated on the Nitto ATP Finals from a studio in Japan on several occasions, Matsuoka is this week visiting the prestigious season finale in person for the first time. The 58-year-old did not hesitate when asked for his opinion on the ATP Tour’s most eye-catching current stars.

“At the moment I like [Carlos] Alcaraz and [Jannik] Sinner,” Matsuoka told ATPTour.com in Turin. “I had an interview with them at the Australian Open and also at the US Open. They were so nice.

“I’ve been coaching juniors for 25 years at the Japan Tennis Association. Kei Nishikori and all those guys. Tennis has completely changed. Alcaraz and Sinner play a new tennis. Also the speaking, the way they act, it’s all new. So I had to change myself, the speaking, the way I act. Tennis is changing, so in Japan we have to start the new generation and new tennis also in Japan too. It’s a mental approach.”

Matsuoka, who finished his playing career with 145 tour-level wins, according to the Infosys ATP Win/Loss Index, is in Turin to commentate for Japanese broadcaster UNEXT, while he is also filming his own experience at the Nitto ATP Finals.

“I’m very excited,” he said. “This is the first time I’ve been to the event. I was doing the television coverage in Japan, with Kei Nishikori, Novak Djokovic and everyone. I was commentating, but this is my first time coming here and it is completely different. It’s like a show. The players, everybody, make it feel like the Finals.

“I want to introduce how big the Nitto ATP Finals are and how tennis is improving [to people in Japan. Not just watching it. The whole show, the food, the places. Those things I think are very important. I am learning, so I am taking many things from here and will bring them to Japan and use them at the Japan Open to change and make more exciting things for tennis.”

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Matsuoka’s colourful and varied post-playing career also includes motivational speaking. He is known around the world for his short videos that usually involve him delivering encouraging phrases to viewers, while he has also hosted a weekly cooking show, Kuishinbo! Bansai, since 2000. For Matsuoka, any visit to Italy is also a reminder of the social importance of food.

“Eating is a passion and [relates to] how you feel,” he said. “Italy has this feeling in the culture. The food, the water. When they eat, they eat, it is always with family, and that is a very good thing, I think. Not alone. The family and friends are important for tasting too. I have a couple of days here, so I also want to concentrate on eating and restaurants. I just had a pizza here and it is completely different in Japan.”

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Salisbury/Skupski mark their intent with group sweep at Nitto ATP Finals

  • Posted: Nov 14, 2025

Joe Salisbury and Neal Skupski offered another compelling reminder of why they believe they are the team to beat at the 2025 Nitto ATP Finals on Friday evening in Turin.

The fifth seeds completed a flawless 3-0 sweep of the John McEnroe Group with a 7-5, 6-3 victory over already-eliminated Americans Christian Harrison and Evan King. Making their team debut at the prestigious season finale, Salisbury and Skupski remain the only unbeaten pair in the field entering semi-final Saturday.

Their 72-minute win also extended Salisbury’s personal streak at the Nitto ATP Finals to 13 matches, following back-to-back titles with Rajeev Ram in 2022-23. The Britons are now level with Harrison and King at 2-2 in their Lexus ATP Head2Head series.

“Joe seems to never lose in a group-stage match,” Salisbury said with a smile. “It’s going really well, we’re happy to get three wins. We’ve been through some difficult times this week, but we’ve managed to keep going.”

Although Salisbury and Skupski have yet to lift a trophy this season, they have reached five finals — including at Roland Garros and the US Open — and will take plenty of confidence into Saturday’s all-British semi-final against top seeds Julian Cash and Lloyd Glasspool. They have surrendered just one set on their way to the last four.

“I think we just give it our all in every match,” Salisbury added. “We know it’s going to be tough with all the best teams here, but there’s something about this place that I feel good here and enjoy playing on this court.”

Harrison and King were hoping to become the first all-American duo to earn a win at this event since Mike Bryan and Jack Sock captured the title in 2018. But they were outmatched by Salisbury and Skupski, whose sharp volleying and dominant serving prevented them from facing a single break point, according to Infosys ATP Stats.

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Andrea Gaudenzi Q&A at the Nitto ATP Finals

  • Posted: Nov 14, 2025

ATP Chairman Andrea Gaudenzi spoke to the media at the Nitto ATP Finals on a wide range of topics.

This Q&A has been excerpted from the press conference, and has been edited for brevity and readability.

Nitto ATP Finals

Q. This is the fifth year of the Nitto ATP Finals in Turin. What has been your impression of the event so far?
Overall, it’s an amazing edition. We started with COVID, which wasn’t easy, but every single year the event has improved. Kudos to the FITP, they’ve done an incredible job. I think we were all a bit anxious post London, because London was a great event. I think we’ve delivered, and we are above the expectation we had initially.

This one is particularly exciting because we have the No. 1 at stake. It’s super exciting to have the best players in the world fighting for the No. 1 at the end of the year. This is probably the best possible outcome. It’s great for the fans.

Q. Will the Nitto ATP Finals stay in Turin until 2030?
There hasn’t been a decision yet. We’re super happy here. That’s obviously a consideration we need to take into account. We’ve agreed to sit down with the FITP and have a conversation early next year.

Calendar

Q. There’s been a lot of debate about the content of the ATP season with the topic now returning to lower-ranked tournaments like the Challengers and ATP 250s. How do you see the future of the ATP 250 series, especially now we’ve decided to remove the week of Metz and Athens?

Tennis is a very difficult sport to schedule, probably the hardest, for a simple reason: it is direct elimination.

For example, in a Grand Slam or a 12-day event, a player can play one match, or they can play seven matches over 12 days. Look at golf, for example, the top 60 play the 72 holes over four days.

You have Carlos and Jannik playing, I would say, around 80 matches within 18, 20 tournaments. The lower-ranked players play a lower number of matches within 30, 35 tournaments.

In reality, you have four, five calendars within one calendar. Half of the players lose first round, and 75% are done by the second round. For most players, it is a two- or four-day event. For others, it’s a longer event. This highlights the complexity of the calendar.

Obviously, there is a cohort of players saying it is too much. For others, if you remove events, it becomes too few because they need to play. If you lose, you have to go to another tournament and play more matches. That’s why we have the different tiers and categories: Grand Slams, Masters, 500s and 250s.

We try to balance it for all cohorts of players, including challengers, because these events are also very important for the pathway and to build the champions of the future.

In the last few years, we’ve had a strategy of reducing the number of 250s. We are down from 38 to, I think it’s 29. The target to optimize the calendar for ’28, when the new Saudi Masters will come on board, is to continue to reduce the number of 250s.

250s are very important. Every category is important. But we had too many of them. It was really difficult to schedule within the calendar.

We have two problems. The year has 52 weeks and we’re not going to change that. The other thing is that players need a proper off-season. At the moment the off-season is a bit too short.

You need to be able to rest, take a holiday, rebuild your body, restart practicing tennis, then you move into the Australian season.

On top of that we add in the complexity of having seven entities participating in this effort. The four Grand Slams are individual. They have their own dates. Then you have the ITF with the Davis Cup format that has been changing quite a bit in the last few years. You obviously have the ATP and WTA.

If you think of the overall picture, I have sympathy from a player standpoint. You’re dealing with seven entities managing a calendar, seven boards making decisions. So, it’s difficult to have a streamlined effort, which is at the core of the OneVision plan, where you try to unify the governance and try to come up with an ideal, or next-best option of an ideal calendar.

Overall, our strategy has been clear to focus on the premium product, the Masters. The reason for that is simple: we need to provide the best possible experience to the fans. The fans love to watch the best players in the world playing against each other in the best events. The four Grand Slams, the Masters and the Finals are the moments where we get to see this.

Then you have the 500s and 250s where those who play less matches in the Grand Slam and the Masters need to play to keep their level up and improve.

It’s complicated. I have sympathy. For example, Carlos and Jannik have been reaching the final of every Slam, playing very well at the Masters. For those players at the very top, it’s probably very difficult to play a full calendar.

Another problem we have is that we have an open system where players are independent contractors. We have rules and incentives, we try to influence their behaviour, but ultimately a player chooses where to play. They can prioritize a 250 over a 500, a 500 over a Masters. Players often play in lower categories, and in team events and exhibitions outside of our system.

It’s a complex problem to solve. I don’t think there is one solution that fits all. I believe strongly that if everyone was around the same table – Grand Slams, ATP, WTA, ITF – in one room, with one board, one governance, we would do a much better job than we are doing today.

Q. How would you have felt, if when you were a player, the number of 250s was being reduced, making it harder for you to advance to the 500s or 1000s?
You can’t increase the 250s and expand the Masters at the same time.

In my career, I was never one of those guys who went deep into the second week of the Grand Slams and Masters.

Firstly, I was really frustrated by the fact that, even when I was ranked 50, 55, I could only play the main draw of two Masters, Indian Wells and Miami. You end up being 50 in the world and you couldn’t access the premium tier. I thought, why can I play in a Grand Slam main draw and not a Masters main draw? If we have this, we want all the top players playing.

Hence why I think it’s very important to move to a 96 draw. You provide Top 100 players with the possibility of playing main draw in Grand Slams and Masters on at least seven occasions out of nine. The exceptions are Paris, Monte-Carlo, and Saudi will be the same.

In terms of the 250s, I made a lot of mistakes in my career. I often played 250s on clay in Europe the week before the US Open. They were scheduled there, there were swings almost everywhere, tournaments all over.

I learned, improved my behaviour, and realised I was responsible for my own calendar. It was as a little bit of self-discipline. I saw other players who played a smart calendar, who weren’t really attracted by the opportunity for guarantees.

I don’t think players should schedule with guaranteed money as a priority. Players should be playing for ranking points and titles, especially those in the Top 50, Top 100.

The number of 250s is not going to be a problem because our plan is to have exclusive, dedicated category weeks. 10 weeks of 250s, eight weeks of 500s, that’s 18, then the 10 Masters, that’s 28, then the four slams, 32. This is the goal.

This really serves all the Top 100. If you’re at the top, you probably just play Slams and Masters, and a few 500s. If you’re lower in ranking, you play more 500s and 250s. If you are lower in ranking, you play 250s and Challengers. It’s a pyramid. The lower your ranking, the lower you play.

If you’re high in the rankings, in my opinion, you shouldn’t be playing down. If you’re Sinner or Alcaraz, you have no need to play the 250s for money, because it doesn’t fit within your ranking, and it’s not your level. When you’re winning Slams and Masters, you should be playing up.

In Formula 1, for example, a driver is not allowed to race in a lower category. They try to protect their talent. But they have a different system.

Q. Players continue to complain about the Masters 1000s with the extended number of days. Jack Draper called all the Top 20 players, and I don’t think there was a very positive response to these extended events.
On the 12 days’ expansion, I haven’t really invented anything. Indian Wells and Miami were there for 35 years. I came in, I looked at the numbers, and I could see these tournaments were really outperforming the others.

Why are the Slams so successful? Two reasons: incredible infrastructure, and history, the brand. They have big stadiums, and they technically have three weeks, 15 days of main draw plus quallies.

As a sport, we are low in media and very heavy on ticketing for many reasons, one being fragmentation. Ticketing revenue is above 50%, 60%. Compared to other sports, media is probably 60%, 70% of their revenue breakdown.

2025 was year three of the OneVision plan, but in year one of the expanded Masters, you can already see the results. If you look at the top-line revenue, which I cannot disclose, it’s going up very high. It’s changing a lot.

Thanks to the profit-sharing formula the players now have, we paid out almost $20 million in 2024, up from $6 million in 2023. That represents 25% on top of prize money, which was also increased.

This means the total profit of the Masters is close to 110 million, 109 million. The way the profit-sharing formula works – you take the profits, deduct the base prize money, and share the excess.

Simplified, this is working from a financial standpoint and providing a lot of value to all players, because that money goes to the whole ecosystem, including the players ranked 100, 150.

I always knew that the 12-day format would probably not be well received by the top players, because they are the ones who need to arrive a few days early. I have a lot of sympathy for the fact that they are the ones who also stay late. They are really the ones affected by the 12 days. All other players, they lose early. Even in the quarterfinals, there’s not much of a change.

I think we need to be a few more years into the plan or we need to shift more compensation to the top players to reward them for the value they’re driving. It also becomes a debate around compensation per day. It’s simple mathematics. The players probably look and say, I could be making ‘X’ in an exhibition for one day. If I go there, I make ‘X’ divided by 12 days. That’s the issue at the moment.

Again, I want to be very clear. I don’t believe a perfect product exists. All I believe is we’ve started with an assumption, we need to give it a few years to see if it works, then we can review and decide whether to go backwards or continue.

We also need to look at all aspects, because the 12-day format was achieved as part of a deal which included tournaments agreeing to open their economics to the players. Just to be clear, for 35 years the players had no access to the economics of the tournaments. They had no clue how much money we were making.

It’s like saying you and I have a 50-50 partnership. You make $100. You ask me how much I make. I tell you, sorry. Now the books are open. Players have full benefit. They are now equity partners. So that was a compromise.

The other compromise was the aggregation of media. There are a lot of things that we’ve done that will benefit the entire ecosystem over time. All I’m asking is be a little bit patient because I think it will deliver value. The second ask, try to manage your schedule slightly differently in the other tournaments that you play.

Yes, we’ve added in the Masters 1000 category, but if you take away from exhibitions or lower category tournaments that you play, I think you’re going to be fine because it is a matter of the balance between the two.

Q. Do you have an ideal number, in your mind, of weeks you think the off-season should be in tennis?
I don’t know if there’s an exact number. Some players would say six, some say seven, some say eight. Surely a player needs one or two weeks off, then one or two weeks to start building their body, then they pick up the racquet again. I think it definitely needs to be longer than what it is today.

Then the question is, for who? I played the Davis Cup Final once in my career. That was the only time where I had to wait for that. Otherwise, players like me would be done after Paris.

Obviously the top eight finish later. Now the Davis Cup format means players who lost in Paris have to wait until after the Finals for that event.

I love the Davis Cup. I probably had the best matches of my career there. I think it’s an incredible asset. We should all come together to try to make it the World Cup for tennis.

I think the best product is the home and away. The Final I played in Milan is probably the best memory of my career. You go to cities where we don’t take tennis with the Tour. I played quarterfinals against the U.S., Agassi-Sampras, in Palermo. Regardless of which players you have, you’re going to have a full stadium cheering for your country. That atmosphere for me is the core of our product.

The problem at the time was playing it every year and on different surfaces. One year we played the Davis Cup against the Czech Republic in Naples. We won. On Tuesday I had to play on hard court in Dubai. It’s challenging.

In the ideal world I think Davis Cup could go home and away over two years. There is no World Cup in sport that happens every year, to my knowledge. I think it would be better for the product and would also release a lot of pressure from the calendar.

Last but not least, there is the difference between finishing the season in Paris and the Finals. That is where I think the beginning of the season comes into play. I don’t know the stat top of mind, but I believe Novak won the Australian Open seven times without playing anything prior to that. Jannik won the Australian Open without playing anything. For those guys, winning at that level, you have the flexibility to do that. You don’t have to play week one and two.

If there is no Masters, that’s where you create your own flexibility. If you go too deep and play more matches than others, that’s when you have to say, stop. That’s why we’re going to look at ’28 in trying to keep that in mind.

I do believe players need at least seven weeks off, I would say, in the off-season.

Governance

Q. What are the latest movements of the top players with the Grand Slams? How does it affect their relationship between the ATP and the wider ecosystem?
I’ll go back to One Vision, the plan I laid out in 2020 when I started.

There are obviously flaws in our system because of the legacy of having four independent Slams, the ATP, the WTA, and the ITF.

The Slams, and I want to make this very clear, are the best tournaments in our sport. They are incredible assets. The Slams are probably the best way to showcase our sport. I thank them immensely for what they have done and what they’re doing. As a player, you grow up dreaming of being in a Slam. Probably the main two goals are becoming No. 1 and winning a Slam.

In the ATP, 50% of the governance is players. Every decision we make, we need the approval of the player board representative that gets elected by the players council, which is 10 players representing the wider group. So, it is a very democratic environment.

Obviously, you have four independent entities. Maybe that’s to a certain extent an advantage because you just do things and you don’t have to ask everyone permission.

On the other hand, if you look from a player perspective, players have no representation. We have a formula which is very transparent to the players. They deliver value, they gain more value. All they’re asking for generally is fair representation and fair compensation, whatever that is. Maybe the level is already right, but they just don’t know and they don’t feel they’re heard. I think that’s a fair ask.

That is the goal of OneVision. To get everyone in one room, players, men and women, equally represented, then the Grand Slams, Masters, 500s and 250s. Everybody needs to be at the same table because we are talking to the same people. I’ve said many times; it’s like writing a book and the chapters are written by different writers and sold in different bookstores. It’s not optimal.

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ATP renews global partnership with Yokohama Tyres through 2028

  • Posted: Nov 14, 2025

The ATP has today announced the renewal of its global partnership with Yokohama Tyres. The premium Japanese tyre manufacturer continues as Official Tyre Partner and Gold Partner of the ATP Tour through 2028.

Under the renewed agreement, Yokohama will further expand its presence in tennis, activating across a broader portfolio of ATP Tour events including the Rolex Monte-Carlo Masters, Internazionali BNL d’Italia (Rome), Mutua Madrid Open, Bitpanda Hamburg Open and the Nitto ATP Finals.

Yokohama also becomes the Presenting Partner of the ATP Hot Shot of the Month, a monthly fan-voted series celebrating memorable hot-shots on the ATP Tour. This new activation builds on Yokohama’s year-round presence across the ATP Tour’s digital and social platforms, reaching millions of tennis fans worldwide.

Additional benefits include on-court and on-site brand visibility, as well as access to world-class corporate hospitality at key ATP events.

Daniele Sano, ATP Chief Business Officer, said: “Our partnership with Yokohama broke new ground as our first Official Tyre Partner. We’re proud to have made history with a truly global leader in the industry, while staying true to our most important ambition: enhancing the fan experience. We’re delighted to see Yokohama deepen its involvement in tennis and look forward to the next chapter of our partnership.”

Giovanni Angelo Ponzoni, CEO Yokohama Europe, said: “We are extremely proud to extend our partnership with the ATP, one of the most prestigious organizations in world sport. Through this renewed agreement, we aim to sustain Yokohama premium brand awareness on a global scale while creating unique and exclusive experiences for our business partners. The ATP represents an exceptional platform to connect with a global community that shares our passion for precision and high performance. We look forward to continuing this successful journey together.”

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Alcaraz clinches ATP Year-End No. 1 presented by PIF honours

  • Posted: Nov 14, 2025

Carlos Alcaraz clinched ATP Year-End No. 1 presented by PIF honours on Thursday when he defeated Lorenzo Musetti to move to 3-0 at the Nitto ATP Finals.

The Spaniard and rival Jannik Sinner arrived at the season finale battling for the prestigious honour, but Alcaraz finished the group stage undefeated to secure year-end No. 1 for the second time.

“It means the world to me, to be honest. The year-end No. 1 is always a goal,” Alcaraz said. “At the beginning of the year, I saw the No. 1 really, really far away [with] Jannik winning almost every tournament he plays. But from the middle of the season ’til now, I [gave myself] the goal for the No. 1 because I thought it was there. I had the chance to play great tennis in a lot of tournaments in a row to put myself in with a chance to be close to Jannik for the No. 1.

“Then in the last three, four tournaments of the year, [I was] fighting toe to toe with Jannik for this spot and then finally I got it. For me, it means everything.”

It has been a memorable year for the 22-year-old, who in 2022 became the youngest year-end No. 1 in history (since 1973). He is just the second active player to secure multiple year-end No. 1 finishes, joining Novak Djokovic (8).

Alcaraz began his season by reaching the quarter-finals at the Australian Open, where he was trying to win the one major missing from his resume. But since then, the Spaniard has been a dominant force on the ATP Tour.

The World No. 1 has won a Tour-leading eight titles in 2025, including victories at two majors (Roland Garros and US Open), three ATP Masters 1000 events (Monte-Carlo, Rome and Cincinnati) and three ATP 500 tournaments (Rotterdam, Queen’s Club and Tokyo). The eight trophies are the most he has earned in a season.

Alcaraz emerged victorious at Roland Garros and the US Open, becoming the second-youngest man in the Open Era to lift six Slam trophies behind only Bjorn Borg, who was also 22 when he reached the mark.

Alcaraz’s triumph at Roland Garros was particularly memorable. He saved three championship points against Sinner in the final, which at five hours and 29 minutes was the longest in tournament history. The 22-year-old became just the ninth player in the Open Era to rally from two sets down to win a major final, and the first to do it at Roland Garros since 2004, when Gaston Gaudio battled past Guillermo Coria.

By winning the US Open, which he did with the loss of just one set, Alcaraz became the youngest of four men to earn multiple major titles on clay, grass and hard courts. Djokovic, Rafael Nadal and Mats Wilander are the other three.

Alcaraz has been more consistent than ever in 2025, advancing to the final of nine consecutive tournaments from the Rolex Monte-Carlo Masters in April through the Kinoshita Group Japan Open Tennis Championships in Tokyo in September.

Alcaraz won 17 straight ATP Masters 1000 matches from the start of Monte-Carlo through his championship victory at the Cincinnati Open. Since the introduction of the Masters 1000 series in 1990, only Djokovic, Roger Federer, Nadal and Pete Sampras have earned longer winning streaks at the level.

The Murcia native joins Borg, Stefan Edberg and Lleyton Hewitt with two ATP Year-End No. 1 presented by PIF finishes. He is the 11th player to claim year-end No. 1 more than once.

ATP Chairman Andrea Gaudenzi said: “Ending the season as the No. 1 player in the world is an incredible achievement—one that only 19 players have accomplished in more than 50 years of history. To do it twice by the age of 22 makes it even more special. It speaks not only to Carlos’ exceptional talent, but to his relentless drive to improve and his determination to compete against the very best. He should be immensely proud of what he’s achieved, and we look forward to watching him continue to inspire fans around the world.”

Having finished the group stage undefeated at the Nitto ATP Finals, Alcaraz has won the Jimmy Connors Group and will face the winner of Alexander Zverev and Felix Auger-Aliassime Saturday in the semi-finals. He is two victories from triumphing at the season finale for the first time.

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Alcaraz downs Musetti to seal Year-End No. 1, sends De Minaur into SFs at Nitto ATP Finals

  • Posted: Nov 13, 2025

Carlos Alcaraz blocked out the roar of a partisan Turin crowd on Thursday at the Nitto ATP Finals, where he reclaimed one of tennis’ most prestigious honours.

The 22-year-old Spaniard overcame debutant Lorenzo Musetti 6-4, 6-1 inside a rocking Inalpi Arena to secure ATP Year-End No. 1 presented by PIF honours for the first time since 2022. The victory capped a perfect 3-0 run through the Jimmy Connors Group and also sent Alex de Minaur — who defeated Taylor Fritz earlier on Thursday — through to the semi-finals in second place.

“The match was really important for me, playing for Year-End No.1,” said Alcaraz, who improved to 7-1 in his Lexus ATP Head2Head series with Musetti. “It wasn’t easy at the beginning with the nerves. I tried to handle that pressure the best I could, so I’m just really happy with the level I played and to be able to end the year as the No. 1.”

By topping his group, Alcaraz has also opened the possibility of another final showdown with defending champion Jannik Sinner, who has already sealed his finish at the top of the Bjorn Borg Group with two wins.

Alcaraz absorbed the full force of the home support early on and stayed committed to the high-risk, high-reward tactics that has defined his campaign at the Nitto ATP Finals. Despite tallying 21 unforced errors, he struck 26 winners to Musetti’s eight to unsettle the Italian, sealing his 83-minute triumph with trademark flair.

“It was a really important goal to end the year as the No. 1, but this tournament is really important for me,” added Alcaraz, who is chasing his first Nitto ATP Finals. “I’m excited about qualifying for the semi-finals and hopefully getting to the final. We will see… Part of the job is done, but I’m excited to keep going.”

Needing a win to join Alcaraz in the last four, Musetti produced flashes of brilliance to ignite the crowd in the opening set, including a series of crisp approaches to the net. Yet the Italian struggled to maintain that level in the extended rallies and was unable to convert either of his two break points, according to Infosys ATP Stats.

“I think I managed to start really well and to serve big. That was the only chance I had to try to deal with Carlos’ game,” said Musetti. “Tonight I think he also served pretty well. He was managing to put me in a position where I had to run a lot and be really aggressive.

“At the end, of course, the physical part was tough to deal with. All the credit to Carlos, who played really incredible tennis. Every time he surprises me more. Hopefully one day I will have my revenge.”

Musetti’s stirring victory over De Minaur on Tuesday — in which he reeled off the final four games — had kept his semi-final hopes alive and left the Australian’s fate uncertain. Two days later, De Minaur responded with a clutch win over Fritz and now advances to a semi-final showdown with defending champion Sinner.

[NEWSLETTER FORM]

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Third Challenger title since start of October? Barrios Vera keeps charge alive in Montevideo

  • Posted: Nov 13, 2025

Tomas Barrios Vera has enjoyed a late-season surge on the ATP Challenger Tour, boosting his chances of finishing the season inside the Top 100 of the PIF ATP Rankings. In action this week at the Uruguay Open, the Chilean is seeking his third Challenger title since the start of October, having triumphed in Cali, Colombia and then in Lima, Peru last week.

The 27-year-old cruised into the Montevideo quarter-finals on Thursday with a 6-3, 6-3 victory against local wild card Franco Roncadelli.

At No. 110 in the PIF ATP Live Rankings, Barrios Vera would have a chance of returning to the Top 100 for the first time in 21 months should he win the Montevideo crown.

Last week in Lima, Barrios Vera saved five match points in a four-hour, 24-minute minute quarter-final thriller against Argentine Juan Bautista Torres 7-6(2) 6-7(6) 7-6(10) en route to lifting his third Challenger trophy of the season and seventh overall.

In other action, Paraguay’s 21-year-old Adolfo Daniel Vallejo rallied past Alvaro Guillen Meza 2-6, 6-3, 6-4 to reach the last eight. Guillen Meza conquered top seed Sebastian Baez in the opening round.

Former World No. 17 Cristian Garin beat Alex Barrena 6-2, 6-4 and fourth seed Carlos Taberner ousted Zdenek Kolar 7-6(2), 6-3.

[NEWSLETTER FORM]

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