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Remembering John Beddington, longtime tennis administrator

  • Posted: Oct 21, 2025

John Beddington, the longtime tennis administrator who was one of the first tournament directors of the event that is now called the Nitto ATP Finals, passed away last week aged 83.

For more than five decades, Beddington was a key figure in the sport who shaped many, including the best players in the world and children in need. From laying the groundwork for some of the sport’s biggest events to giving back to the community, he has left tennis far greater than he found it.

Beddington was tournament director of the Commercial Union Grand Prix Masters from 1972 through 1976, and later played a critical role in Barclays becoming the title sponsor of the tournament when it moved to The O2 in London.

Three years later, Beddington became Executive Vice President of Tennis Canada and remained with the organisation until 1995. He was tournament director for what is now the National Bank Open Presented by Rogers.

In that capacity, Beddington not only built one of the best tournaments in the world — it is now an ATP Masters 1000 and WTA 1000 event — but left a positive impression on the biggest stars in the sport.

Ivan Lendl, a former No. 1 player in the PIF ATP Rankings, won the Canadian event six times between 1980 and 1989.

“I got to know John through the Canadian Open. We stayed in touch over the years,” Lendl said. “John was a great guy, I always enjoyed seeing him at the All England Lawn Tennis Club. John did a fantastic job in Toronto and Montreal. I appreciated his wicked sense of humor and was very sad to hear about John’s passing.”

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Valerie Tetreault, Vice President of Communications, Professional Events and Tournament Director of the National Bank Open in Montreal, said that everyone associated with Tennis Canada and Canadian tennis mourns Beddington’s passing.

“The word trailblazer is sometimes used too often, but in John’s case it is absolutely fitting. He dedicated his life to the growth of our sport both in Canada and on a global level,” Tetreault. “His influence on our flagship WTA and ATP 1000 tournaments, the National Bank Open presented by Rogers in Toronto and Montreal, cannot be understated and their growth into the prestigious, world-renowned events they are today is in large part down to him.

“His legacy in Canadian tennis is enormous, and he will be remembered for the incredible footprint he leaves behind on our sport.”

Two years ago, Beddington was honoured at Wimbledon by the International Tennis Hall of Fame and the International Tennis Federation with the Golden Achievement Award.

“I have been fortunate to have had a very long career in tennis and was lucky to be around when tennis went open in 1968,” Beddington said at the time. “I’m thankful for the tremendous mentors, colleagues, and great friends I’ve made around the world in the sport over the years. It has been rewarding to see the sport thrive globally and I’m happy to have been able to play a role in tennis’ global development.”

Beddington also was a co-founder of the longtime ATP Champions Tour event held at Royal Albert Hall in London and helped launch countless other tournaments.

Throughout his time in the sport, Beddington raised close to £2 million for charity, supporting several causes and organisations, including Give It Your Max, for which he was patron. The goal was to try to keep kids off the street and instead introduce them to sport.

Give It Your Max posted on Instagram: “John’s kindness, vision, and enthusiasm will be deeply missed, but his impact on the tennis world – and on the lives he helped to change through our programmes – will continue to be felt for many years to come.”

Beddington is survived by his wife, Roseann Madden Beddington, and his sons, David Paul Madden Beddington and James Edward Beddington.

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What were the Vienna tennis results?

  • Posted: Oct 21, 2025

Day 1 of the Erste Bank Open in Vienna saw third seed Alex de Minaur and Alexander Bublik advance to the second round on Monday. Tallon Griekspoor stunned fifth seed Karen Khachanov.

View all results from Monday below.

Read more from Vienna:
De Minaur notches 300th career win in fast Vienna start
Sinner says he will convince ‘second father’ Cahill to stay in his corner
Budkov Kjaer, Sinner’s practice partner, ready to unleash the ‘hammer’ in Vienna

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Results – Monday, 20 October 2025
Men’s Singles – Round of 32

Brandon Nakashima (USA) d Luciano Darderi (ITA) 62 75
[8] Alexander Bublik (KAZ) d Alejandro Tabilo (CHI) 64 64
[3] Alex de Minaur (AUS) d [WC] Jurij Rodionov (AUT) 64 61
Tallon Griekspoor (NED) d [5] Karen Khachanov 63 57 64
[Q] Matteo Arnaldi (ITA) d [Q] Aleksandar Kovacevic (USA) 75 64

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What were the Basel tennis results?

  • Posted: Oct 21, 2025

Day 1 of the Swiss Indoors Basel, an ATP 500 event in Basel, Switzerland, saw #NextGenATP star Jakub Mensik and eighth seed Alejandro Davidovich Fokina win their first-round matches on Monday.

View all results from Monday below.

Read more from Basel:
Mensik ousts fellow #NextGenATP talent Bernet in Basel debut
Fritz to face Shanghai champ Vacherot in Basel draw blockbuster

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Results – Monday, 20 October 2025
Men’s Singles – Round of 32

Jenson Brooksby (USA) d Alexandre Muller (FRA) 64 63
[8] Alejandro Davidovich Fokina (ESP) d Lorenzo Sonego (ITA) 76(2) 64
[7] Jakub Mensik (CZE) d [WC] Henry Bernet (SUI) 76(1) 67(7) 63
Jaume Munar (ESP) d [Q] Remy Bertola (SUI) 62 64

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De Minaur notches 300th career win in fast Vienna start

  • Posted: Oct 20, 2025

Alex de Minaur kick-started his 2025 title bid at the Erste Bank Open with a milestone Monday victory against home favourite Jurij Rodionov.

The third-seeded Australian brushed aside wild card Rodionov 6-4, 6-1 at the indoor ATP 500 to claim his 300th tour-level win. De Minaur, who has now earned a Tour-leading 38 hard-court victories this season, is just the second man born in 1999 or later to hit the 300 tally, after World No. 2 Jannik Sinner.

“It’s pretty cool. You go through this sport, through your career, and you don’t really get time or many options to really let something sink in,” said De Minaur. “This is one of those things that is a pretty cool moment, to get to 300. Obviously, it seems what has been a long career and I’ve enjoyed these 300 wins.”

De Minaur raced to the milestone in style against World No. 154 Rodionov, who competed well in the first set but crucially let slip two break points in the fifth game. The Austrian became increasingly erratic with his groundstrokes in the second and De Minaur ultimately eased to an 80-minute victory inside the Wiener Stadthalle.

Next up for De Minaur in the Austrian capital is a second-round meeting with Camilo Ugo Carabelli or another home wild card, Filip Misolic. The Australian remains on track to qualify for the Nitto ATP Finals for the second consecutive year: De Minaur is currently seventh in the PIF ATP Live Race To Turin, just 125 points shy of sixth-placed Ben Shelton.

It All Adds Up

Eighth seed Alexander Bublik also had little trouble advancing to the second round in Vienna. According to Infosys ATP Stats, the Kazakhstani struck 12 aces and won 91 per cent (31/34) of points behind his first serve in his 6-4, 6-4 triumph against Alejandro Tabilo. After winning his maiden Lexus ATP Head2Head clash with Tabilo in just 68 minutes, the World No. 16 Bublik will play Francisco Cerundolo or Alex Michelsen for a quarter-final spot.

In other Monday action, Brandon Nakashima defeated Luciano Darderi 6-2, 7-5 to set a meeting with fifth seed Karen Khachanov or Tallon Griekspoor, while Matteo Arnaldi eased past Aleksandar Kovacevic 7-5, 6-4. Italy’s Arnaldi will play second seed and former champion Alexander Zverev or Jacob Fearnley in the second round.

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Mikrut honouring his late father with career-best tennis

  • Posted: Oct 20, 2025

Luka Mikrut is living out his childhood dream while honouring the memory of his late father.

The 21-year-old, who is “playing the best tennis of his life”, recently climbed to a career-high No. 159 in the PIF ATP Rankings, in part thanks to his two ATP Challenger Tour trophies earned in the past three months. He also reached the Valencia Challenger final in his most recent outing, extending his run to 19 wins in his past 22 matches.

However, Mikrut is doing it without his father, Mijo, who passed away in 2023.

“He had bad cancer,” Mikrut told ATPTour.com. “He was sick for one year. When they first found out what it was, they told him maybe one or two months. He pulled it out to one year. But it was very hard. Those situations really hit hard.

“Even before he died, he was really sick and when you are younger, you don’t think about it. But when this happens in the family, you start to think about this stuff a bit and it’s not easy.”

Mikrut fondly recalls the days he and his father travelled to tournaments together, with Mijo meticulously handling every detail, from organising the coaching plan, booking flights and more. Now, Mikrut is handling that aspect alone. Mikrut’s life on the road has not been the same without his father, whose absence he deeply felt while competing shortly after his passing.

“One day it was his funeral and the next day I went to a tournament and I played the day after,” said Mikrut. “I had no chance to do anything.”

There was a moment last year when the emotions came rushing back.

“When I was playing Davis Cup for the second time, I was there and at one point it just hit, ‘He doesn’t know it’s Davis Cup time, it’s in Croatia’,” Mikrut said. “It hits hard.”

But to understand Mikrut is to know his resilience. A fitting quote from his favourite movie, Rocky V, is even etched on his right bicep: “It ain’t about how hard you hit. It’s about how hard you can get hit and keep moving forward, how much you can take and keep moving forward.”

Those words are a source of strength for Mikrut, who said that tattoo was the most painful of the seven he sports.

“Every ink drop was worth it,” he said with a laugh. “Sometimes I remember it and it gets me going, gets me hyped and gives me some extra energy you need to win. You see Rocky in every movie, he is getting beaten a lot and somehow he wins it. Sometimes, actually very often, it’s like that in tennis.”

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A native of Split — Croatia’s second-largest city — Mikrut began playing tennis aged five. His tennis-fanatic grandmother owned videotapes and DVDs of classic matches of Roger Federer, Pete Sampras and others. Mikrut’s mother owned a DVD shop in the 2000s. Though DVDs are largely forgotten, those tennis films hold a special place in Mikrut’s heart.

“It’s a bit nostalgic. I used to watch that all day and since I was young I would put the [headband] around my head and imitate that I’m Federer,” Mikrut said. “I don’t watch it anymore, but we still have the player and the tapes. I have one video of Federer and Agassi at the US Open, I don’t know which year, but I used to watch it all day, every day.”

Mikrut honed his game at Tennis Klub Split, a renowned breeding ground for Croatian talent that has produced stars including Goran Ivanisevic and Mario Ancic. Dino Prizmic, a contender for the Next Gen ATP Finals presented by PIF also trained there. There is a proud tennis legacy in Split, the hometown of the late Nikola Pilic, who passed away in September.

“We are not a big country, there’s not many of us in tennis compared to other countries like Italy, France or the United States, but we are doing good results,” said Mikrut.

<img alt=”Luka Mikrut at the Braga Challenger.” style=”width:100%;” src=”/-/media/images/news/2025/10/06/15/32/mikrut-bragach-2025.jpg” />
Luka Mikrut at the Braga Challenger. Credit: Eduardo Oliveira/FPT

The champion of this year’s Como and Braga Challenger events, Mikrut received congratulatory texts from the former No. 2 Ivanisevic following his triumphs. Mikrut idolised Federer and countryman Ivanisevic as a child.

“[Goran] was the first Croatian to win a Grand Slam,” Mikrut said. “He is some inspiration because you have a guy from your city win on the big scene and you can see that you can do it yourself.”

Mikrut cannot quite pinpoint what has sparked his sudden rise — a surge of more than 200 spots in the PIF ATP Rankings over the past two months — but one thing is certain: every step forward is a way to make his father proud.

“He always pushed me and I always liked to hear from him that he was proud,” Mikrut said. “And I believe he would be very proud now.”

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Jodar, Bailly charge towards Jeddah with big weeks

  • Posted: Oct 20, 2025

Rafael Jodar and Gilles Arnaud Bailly have made big moves in the PIF ATP Live Race To Jeddah following dream weeks.

Spaniard Jodar has climbed nine spots to ninth in the Live Race after winning his second ATP Challenger Tour title of the season. The 19-year-old, who did not hit a double fault en route to the trophy in Lincoln, United States, was a sparring partner at the Next Gen ATP Finals presented by PIF in 2024 and is now firmly in contention of qualifying this year.

Jodar won the US Open Boys’ Singles title last season and has gone from strength to strength this season, also triumphing at a Challenger Tour event in Greece in August. He is on 267 points, 82 points behind eighth-placed Nishesh Basaverredy, who occupies the final qualification spot.

View PIF ATP Live Race To Jeddah

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Bailly has jumped four places to 11th in the Live Race. The 20-year-old Belgian enjoyed a breakthrough week on home soil at the ATP 250 event in Brussels, where he advanced through qualifying and then defeated Daniel Altmaier to secure his first tour-level win.

“I have always enjoyed the chance to play at an ATP event but to do this in my country, to qualify and then win a round was really special. I really hope to keep going now. It has been a good year for me,” Bailly said.

Bailly began the season outside the Top 800 in the PIF ATP Rankings but now sits at No. 232. The 20-year-old is proud with the progress he has made this season.

“I worked hard at the start of the year and started doing well at the Futures,” Bailly told ATPTour.com. “I then started to play more Challengers and saw my level going up and I was playing better and then had some good opportunities with the Next Gen spots, so I am grateful for that support.”

Read more about the Next Gen Accelerator here.

The Next Gen ATP Finals presented by PIF will take place in Jeddah from 17-21 December. The cutoff date for the Live Race is 10th November, with the Top eight players qualifying for the 20-and-under event. Joao Fonseca won the title in 2024, joining a list of former champions that includes Jannik Sinner and Carlos Alcaraz.

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Auger-Aliassime ramps up the pressure on Musetti in Turin battle following Brussels title

  • Posted: Oct 20, 2025

Felix Auger-Aliassime, Casper Ruud and Daniil Medvedev kept themselves in Nitto ATP Finals contention with title runs last week. ATPTour.com looks at the movers of the week in the PIF ATP Live Race To Turin as of Monday 20 October.

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Felix Auger-Aliassime – ninth (3,145 points), +1
The Canadian has climbed one spot and moved to within 340 points of eighth-placed Lorenzo Musetti following victory in Brussels. The 25-year-old defeated Jiri Lehecka to win the crown, with his wife Nina Ghaibi watching courtside. Auger-Aliassime next heads to Basel and is aiming to qualify for the Nitto ATP Finals for the second time (2022).

View the PIF ATP Live Race To Turin

Casper Ruud – 11th (2,735)
Ruud remains 11th in the Live Race but has made ground on Musetti after winning the title in Stockholm. The 26-year-old is the first Norwegian to triumph at the ATP 250 and is now 37-14 on the year, according to the Infosys ATP Win/Loss Index.

Danii Medvedev – 13th (2,560)

Could the 29-year-old qualify for the year-end event for the seventh consecutive season? The 2020 Nitto ATP Finals champion kept himself in contention by winning his first title in 882 days in Almaty, where he beat Corentin Moutet in the final to improve to 2-1 in the pair’s Lexus ATP Head2Head series. Medvedev will search for more precious points at the ATP 500 in Vienna this week.

Carlos Alcaraz, Jannik Sinner and Novak Djokovic have already qualified for the Nitto ATP Finals, taking place from 9-16 November at Inalpi Arena in Turin.

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