China’s Shang Juncheng earned the biggest win of his career Saturday night on home soil by beating Karen Khachanov at the Rolex Shanghai Masters. With his 7-6(3), 6-3 victory, Shang notched his first win against a Top 10 opponent in the PIF ATP Rankings and advanced to the third round at an ATP Masters 1000 for the first time.
“Unbelievable match today against Karen. He’s a very solid Top 10 player,” said the 20-year-old #NextGenATP star, who was a perfect three-for-three on break points, according to Infosys ATP Stats. “Coming into the match, I didn’t think too much, just wanted to put on a show for the people. I didn’t start perfectly in the match, but kept fighting, kept focusing every point, was playing really happy, no matter winning or losing.
“I’m glad that I got the win. But overall, just happy with the performance.”
Shang is the youngest of three Chinese players who have reached the Shanghai third round, with all three instances coming since 2023. Zhang Zhizhen advanced to that stage that year, while Wu Yibing accomplished the feat in 2024. Shang is also the second Chinese player to earn a Top 10 win on home soil, after Buyunchaokete beat Andrey Rublev last year in Beijing.
Shang and Khachanov twice traded breaks in the opening set. In the second set, Shang rode a string of winners to victory, claiming the final three games from 3-3 and rattling off the final six points of the match.
“I think overall just, like I said, didn’t think too much. Sometimes the winner comes without thinking,” added Shang, who was cheered on by family in the crowd, including his grandmother. “If you think too much, you might be tight at that moment, I thought, ‘OK, time to work, time to get it done.’
“Against players like Karen, you might only have one chance to close it out. If I don’t, it might be the match, it might be a grind in the third set, you never know. But I’m glad that I kept the focus. And at the end it went smoothly.”
Learner Tien might have a new nickname on the ATP Tour, the “Comeback Kid.”
The 19-year-old American rallied from a set down for the second time in as many days on Saturday to defeat No. 33 seed Corentin Moutet 4-6, 6-4, 6-4, to reach the third round at the Rolex Shanghai Masters.
Tien came back to defeat Miomir Kecmanovic 4-6, 6-3, 6-4 in the first round in his tournament debut on Friday and 24 hours later he rallied from two breaks down in the second set and a break down in the third set to beat the left-handed Frenchman.
“I am really happy to pull that one off,” said Tien, who will next face No. 30 seed Cameron Norrie in the third round on Monday. “It was definitely looking rough, especially in that second set. I didn’t really lose hope. I feel like in a lot of my return games I had looks, whether it be 15-30 or Love-15 points that I feel like I should be winning to go up Love-30, and I just let a lot of chances slip by. So just try to keep a level head as best I could, and just keep believing that I was still in the match.”

Going back to his last tournament in Beijing where he reached his first ATP Tour final, Tien’s last four wins have come from a set down. In the quarter-finals, Tien defeated No. 9 Lorenzo Musetti, who retired with a thigh injury at 0-3 down in the third set. In the semi-finals, Tien beat World No. 18 Daniil Medvedev, who retired at 0-4 down in the final set. Tien also came back from a set down in the first round aginast No. 21 Francisco Cerundolo.
Tien finished last season at No. 122 in the PIF ATP Rankings, culminating with a runner-up at the Next Gen ATP Finals in Jeddah where he lost to Joao Fonseca. He began the ATP Tour Asian swing ranked No. 54, reaching the quarter-finals in Hangzhou and final in Beijing. He has climbed to No. 37 in the PIF ATP Live Rankings.
Tien has a match record of 25-20 on the season, including an impresssive 5-3 vs. Top 10 opponents. Tien has been working since this summer with former World No. 2 Michael Chang, who he credits with his improvement.
“He’s helped me a lot and he’s really, really been a great influence on me,” said Tien of the International Tennis Hall of Fame member. “He’s really helped me kind of, in my first year. I don’t have that much experience playing week-to-week, and someone like him that has been around coaching and playing for so long, his insight and his experience has been super, super helpful.”
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