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Fritz's aces all add up to a record mark

  • Posted: Jan 23, 2026

During the Australian Open, ATPTour.com will bring fans insight into the leaders of key statistical categories, showing how performances throughout 2025 all added up to successful seasons and the promise of more good times ahead in 2026.

Taylor Fritz has cemented his status as one of the game’s most dominant servers, firing a tour-leading 867 aces in 2025. The rest of the Tour ought to take notice, as Infosys ATP Data reveals that Fritz has been on a clear upward trajectory.

After striking 530 aces across 56 matches in 2021, Fritz has steadily climbed the leaderboard each season to where he is today, leading the pack.

Fritz’s aces per match, past five seasons

Year Aces Matches Avg. Pos.
2025 867 74 11.72 1st
2024 725 74 9.8 3rd
2023 692 77 8.98 2nd
2022 642 62 10.35 7th
2021 530 56 9.46 11th

“Every single time I step up, I’ll try to get an ace,” Fritz told ATPTour.com at the Australian Open. “Maybe there’s an exception that if conditions are really slow and the balls are worn out, I might be thinking where can I serve that gives me the best chance of starting the point if it’s not an ace. But I think I’m always stepping up to try to get a free point off the serve.”

Fritz’s dominance from the line was put on full display last year in Stuttgart, where the American went unbroken across 43 service games to lift the trophy. He crushed 45 aces that week and only faced four break points all tournament.

Does Fritz feel he has a better chance to fire an ace if the returner is standing close to the baseline or far back?

“It depends on the speed and the conditions. I’d say a pretty neutral position feels good,” Fritz said. “I feel people who stand up are very easy to ace, but if they get a racquet on it, then the return that comes back is much tougher to deal with.

“If they’re back, I feel they might return more, but the second shot feels much easier. So it’s tough to say.”

A 10-time tour-level titlist, Fritz reached a career-high No. 4 in the PIF ATP Rankings in November 2024, two months after he competed in his first major final at the US Open. In 2025, Fritz qualified for the prestigious Nitto ATP Finals for the third time.

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Visit our Infosys ATP Stats section for more insights.

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Will an experience with Federer help Spizzirri against Sinner at Australian Open?

  • Posted: Jan 23, 2026

Saturday will be a day of firsts for Eliot Spizzirri at the Australian Open.

First third-round match at a major. First clash against a Top-10 opponent. First time competing inside Rod Laver Arena.

But the most important first is that this will be his first Lexus ATP Head2Head meeting against two-time defending champion Jannik Sinner.

“It would be an awesome experience,” Spizzirri said in his press conference before Sinner had advanced. “Going against one of the best players in the world and one of the toughest challengers in our sport. I would be grateful to be out there and do the best I can.”

This will be a new experience for the American, especially considering the stakes. But Spizzirri is not totally unfamiliar with such a big stage.

For much of his teens, Spizzirri would travel from Connecticut to New York three or four times per week to train at the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center, home of the US Open. He mostly trained indoors there, but Arthur Ashe Stadium, the largest tennis-specific stadium in the world, was always looming.

“You feel kind of like an ant in that environment, because there are so many seats and so many people looking at you,” Spizzirri told ATPTour.com. “I’ve only been in Ashe when it’s been pretty empty. It would be really fun to be in that environment in Laver if that is the case. I’ve played on some big courts and hopefully they’ve prepared me as much as possible for a moment like this.”

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The 24-year-old, who was a college star at the University of Texas, has played competitively in Louis Armstrong Stadium, the second stadium at the US Open. That court has a capacity close to the nearly 15,000 fans Rod Laver Arena holds. However, it will be far more packed and electric with Sinner on the other side of the net.

“I’m just trying to enjoy the moment on those courts,” Spizzirri said. “That’s what you work for, you train for and you live for.”

Although practice is far different from a match, Spizzirri has faced pressure inside a big venue. As a junior in 2019, he trained with Roger Federer inside Arthur Ashe Stadium. Patrick Hirscht, Spizzirri’s coach since age 12 who still works with him at Solaris Racquet Club in Connecticut when he is home, remembers the moment well.

“The thing I remember most about it was just the sheer size when you first walk in and you start hitting and you’re like, ‘Wow’. You feel small out there,” Hirscht said. “But also how after five or six minutes, you sort of don’t even notice it anymore. The second thing was just how inviting and normal Roger was and how open he was to Eliot and just he didn’t seem like a superstar. I thought that was really cool and it really lessened the pressure of being out there. It felt like, ‘Hey, let’s just have a hit’. It was nice, it was special.”

<img alt=”Roger Federer and Eliot Spizzirri ” style=”width:100%;” src=”/-/media/images/news/2024/08/26/21/13/federer-spizzirri-us-open.jpg” />

The difference is that Sinner, unlike Federer, will be looking to do everything in his power to dismiss Spizzirri from the court as quickly as possible.

“We started to have a few conversations about it. I think first thing’s first is to be excited about it, because it is cool and when you’re a kid, you dream about these moments,” Hirscht said. “When you get them and you get in them, I think the first hurdle is to not forget you’ve always wanted that. It’s always been something you’re looking forward to. Be excited about it, because it’s very easy to be nervous and overwhelmed for something like that, which I’m sure he still will be a little bit anyway because everyone would be.

“But be excited about it, try to enjoy it and try to instil what we’re trying to do on the court out there because regardless who’s on the other side, try to do what we’re trying to get better at and give it a go.”

Spizzirri is in Melbourne with his traveling coach, Christopher Williams, who explained that even though World No. 2 Sinner will be on the other side of the net, the attention will not solely be on the Italian.

“There is always an awareness of our opponent’s game style and tendencies, but our preparation is usually pretty ‘Eliot focused’,&rdquo. Williams said. “We know the things we do well and when we execute them we compete to win at the highest level. With a match like the third round here, I’m paying a bit more attention to the stage and making sure we are comfortable in the Rod Laver environment so we can be at our best.”

Sinner said of Spizzirri: “Of course, I watched him play in the past couple of matches he played. Very aggressive, talented player. So let’s see what’s coming.”

Spizzirri is known by his colleagues as a tough out who is up for a battle on court. The No. 71 player in the PIF ATP Live Rankings showed that in his second-round match against Wu Yibing, with their encounter lasting five sets. He will hope to put up another big fight against Sinner.

“That’s all I really can do. There’s not much more you can do than go out there and give your best effort,” Spizzirri said. “It’ll be a great test to see where my game is at and give it my best shot. Win or lose, we’re going to learn from it, go back to the drawing board and try to get better.”

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Benjamin Balleret: Working in the dark, winning in the light with half-brother Vacherot

  • Posted: Jan 23, 2026

Years ago, Valentin Vacherot would sometimes turn up at ATP Challenger events to simply watch his half-brother Benjamin Balleret compete.

The two Monegasques would hit a few balls together in the evening before Vacherot, still a schoolboy at the time with no real thoughts of turning professional, headed back to his studies. Tennis was something he enjoyed rather than something he chased, but today, the roles have reversed. It is now Balleret watching from the side of the court, guiding the 27-year-old Vacherot as he competes among the ATP Tour’s elite.

“He was just playing tennis for fun,” Balleret told ATPTour.com, reflecting on Vacherot’s teenage years. “He was going to school and playing from 5 p.m. to 8 p.m. with his coach. He did this until he was almost 18 years old. I would bring him to some Challengers in Italy to just watch my matches. It wasn’t serious, not really professional.”

What once felt like a casual introduction to life on Tour has evolved into one of the most compelling coach-player partnerships, built not solely on contracts but on family and belief. It is a relationship that made global headlines in Shanghai in October last year, when Vacherot stormed through qualifying to become the lowest-ranked ATP Masters 1000 champion in series history (since 1990).

Ironically, Vacherot began that Shanghai run as the No. 204 player in the PIF ATP Rankings — the exact career-high ranking Balleret reached during his own playing days. Now 43, Balleret admits he never achieved the success he hoped for as a player, but the lessons learned have become central to his effectiveness as a coach.

Before committing full time to Vacherot in 2022, Balleret built a strong coaching resume, guiding Gilles Muller to a career-high World No. 21 and working with Pierre-Hugues Herbert across a four-year spell that included three Grand Slam doubles titles. Those experiences helped shape a philosophy rooted in consistency rather than quick fixes.

“Every player, every human is different,” Balleret said. “Some things for me as a coach are important: work, respect… It doesn’t matter who you coach, this has to be there. [You have to] work hard, respect and trust each other. Then everything outside of that, you have to adapt to every player.”

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After Vacherot completed four years of college tennis at Texas A&M — where he played alongside his cousin Arthur Rinderknech, whom he later defeated in the Shanghai final — the brothers formally joined forces. What followed were seasons of steady progress, difficult losses and continued emotional investment.

“Sometimes it was difficult because it took time before what happened in Shanghai,” Balleret explained, referring to the sacrifices. “Because he’s my brother, it was even more difficult when you don’t have the results you want, when you feel like you’re losing so much and you think that you shouldn’t lose, some bad losses.

“But we never stopped believing, working and trusting each other — that’s more important. Then Shanghai happened… I think everybody talks enough about this, but it was really unreal to go until the end.”

<img alt=”Valentin Vacherot, Benjamin Balleret” style=”width:100%;” src=”/-/media/images/news/2026/01/22/13/47/vacherot-balleret-coach-spotlight-2026.jpg” />Valentin Vacherot and Benjamin Balleret celebrate in Shanghai. Photo: Lintao Zhang/Getty Images.

Coaching a family member presents its own challenges, particularly when the emotional lines between success and disappointment are thinner. For Balleret, learning when to step back as a brother and when to step in as a coach has been key to sustaining both the relationship and the results.

“I think it’s even easier sometimes to tell things to your brother,” Balleret said. “The most challenging part is the emotional part. When we win, I try to not be overwhelmed with the win because it’s also my brother and I’m so happy for him. It’s the same for a loss. Sometimes it’s difficult when you have a bad loss and not to be at the bottom, so I try to be really honest with him.

“I have this thing where I know him very well, better than almost everyone. So this has helped me, of course. But we’re also not spending 24 hours together… We try to spend quality time together. It’s pretty easy going. For most of the day, I’m his brother and not his coach.”

Shanghai also represented validation for a wider support team that had been carefully assembled over several seasons.

“Val and I, we tried for three years to put together a team that would help him reach his goals,” Balleret said. “That’s why he’s working with a fitness coach, Julien, his physio, Antoine, the mental coach, Isabelle. Also his girlfriend, Emily… We try to work all together and for all those people also, not only for Val and me.

“I’m so happy that Shanghai happened and that everybody’s rewarded with all the work in the dark. We were working in the shadows for so many years. Now Val is more in the spotlight, everybody’s more in the spotlight. We’re not looking for the spotlight, but you just feel good reaching the goal and being there with the top players and playing every week against those players.”

Vacherot showed the Shanghai title was no one-off. He quickly rose inside the world’s Top 40, reached the quarter-finals in Paris two weeks later and arrived at the 2026 Australian Open — his main-draw debut in Melbourne — as the 30th seed.

So where do they go from here? For Balleret, the focus remains unchanged.

“For this year, the goal for Val is to play the best players and to try to improve every week,” Balleret said. “Maybe he will play this guy and lose to this guy, but what can you improve to beat this guy next? That will be the main challenge this year for Val and I.”

More than 10 years after a young Valentin once watched from the stands without expectation, the tables have fully turned. Balleret is no longer the one being observed. Instead, he is the steady presence behind the scenes, guiding his half-brother through the brightest moments of a career that, not long ago, felt like nothing more than a game.

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Sabalenka hails 'legends' Djokovic, Wawrinka & Cilic: 'There is no age anymore'

  • Posted: Jan 23, 2026

On Thursday, 40-year-old Stan Wawrinka became the oldest man to reach the third round of the Australian Open since Ken Rosewall in 1978, while 37-year-old Marin Cilic showcased his own longevity by notching his 599th tour-level win, drawing level with Goran Ivanisevic for the most victories by a Croatian man in the Open Era.

And then there was 38-year-old, record 10-time champion Novak Djokovic, cruising into the third round in straight sets on Rod Laver Arena. All three featured in the Australian Open draw as far back as 2007, and their remarkable staying power has emerged as one of the defining talking points of the tournament’s opening week in Melbourne.

On Friday, World No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka was the latest star to weigh in on her admiration for the trio.

“These guys are legends, G.O.A.T.s, especially Novak,” Sabalenka said. “He’s been developing his game his whole career. Right now, he’s really relevant with young boys. He’s playing incredible tennis. I feel like it depends on your physicality, of course, mentality, your approach to tennis. He’s very healthy, fit. He’s really focused. Yeah, at this age he’s playing incredible tennis.

“I feel like there is no age anymore in sport. It depends how you approach everything and if you have a smart team around you. I feel your career can be extended for I don’t know how many years.”

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At 27, Sabalenka is herself at the peak of her powers. The top seed lifted the trophy in Melbourne in 2023 and 2024 and reached the final again in 2025. But could she still be competing a decade from now?

“I’m not sure,” Sabalenka said. “I cannot say anything because you never know. You don’t know what’s waiting for you tomorrow. Ideally for me, I would love to, I don’t know, maybe have kids at 32 or something. But knowing me, I know that I love to accept tough challenges, so I feel like even after having kid, I would love to challenge myself, like coming back and see if I still have it, just to challenge myself.

“So probably we’re going to see me being that grandma on tour trying. Hopefully I’ll be pushing these young girls. Let’s talk about that in 10 years. That’s a long time.”

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Alcaraz dazzles Melbourne, rolls into Australian Open R4

  • Posted: Jan 23, 2026

Carlos Alcaraz treated the Melbourne crowd to a highlight-reel performance Friday, earning a 6-2, 6-4, 6-1 victory against Corentin Moutet to reach the Australian Open fourth round.

If the top seed is feeling any pressure of chasing his maiden Australian Open title and a Career Grand Slam, the Spaniard is not showing it. Alcaraz played with confidence and freedom from the baseline, highlighted by a superb tweener on the second point of the second set, a 16-ball exchange that brought alive the fans inside Rod Laver Arena.

After leading 3-0 in the second set, Alcaraz dropped four consecutive games, yet quickly regrouped and earned a crucial break at 4-4 to serve for a two-sets-to-love lead. The World No. 1 in the PIF ATP Rankings raced to a double-break lead in the third set and applied the finishing touches to advance after two hours and five minutes.

“It wasn’t easy,” Alcaraz said. “When you play someone like Corentin, you don’t know what’s going to be next. That’s really difficult to approach the match, but I had so much fun with it on the court. I think we both pulled off great shots, great points. I think there were a few highlights in the match. I’m grateful to play this kind of match against him.”

With his win, Alcaraz improved to 87-13 at Slam level, tying Bjorn Borg for the best major record after 100 matches. A six-time major champion, the 22-year-old has twice reached the quarter-finals in Melbourne.

Up next for Alcaraz is 19th seed Tommy Paul, who advanced after Alejandro Davidovich Fokina retired with the American leading 6-1, 6-1. The Spaniard called the physio for a left leg issue in the second set. Alcaraz leads Paul 5-2 in their Lexus ATP Head2Head series.

“We have great battles against each other,” Alcaraz said of his clashes with Paul, a 2023 semi-finalist in Melbourne. “It’s always really difficult to play against him. He plays great tennis on hard courts with that flat backhand that he slices a lot, aggressive, great touch. It’s going to be a really interesting one.”

Through three matches this fortnight, Alcaraz is yet to drop a set. Against the lefty Moutet, the Spaniard pummeled the ball off both wings, hammering 30 winners, several of which were passing shots by the net-rushing Frenchman. Moutet showed flashes of his best tennis and produced his own magic with exquisite tweeners and feel around the net, adding a flair of entertainment despite the defeat.

“I thought we were in a drop shot competition,” Alcaraz joked. “Definitely, he won.”

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Van de Zandschulp, proven giant-slayer, eyes Djokovic shock at Australian Open

  • Posted: Jan 23, 2026

Ousting the sport’s elite is never meant to be easy, but Botic van de Zandschulp has repeatedly shown he possesses the belief, and the game, to trouble the very best on the biggest stages.

The 30-year-old Dutchman will look to tap into that giant-slaying pedigree again on Saturday, when he faces record 10-time Australian Open champion Novak Djokovic in the third round at Melbourne Park. It is a daunting assignment, but not an unfamiliar one for Van de Zandschulp, who has beaten ATP No. 1 Club members Carlos Alcaraz and Rafael Nadal within the past two years — and holds a recent victory over Djokovic himself.

“It’s always nice to play one of the best of the game. It’s a nice matchup as well, I know I can play well during them and I’ve proved it in the past,” Van de Zandschulp told ATPTour.com in Melbourne. “I know what I’m capable of… It gives you a confidence boost when you see those names in the draw. Of course you are scared, but further into the tournament when I have some matches in, I feel I can beat a lot of players.

“Matches like these against Novak, if you can enjoy it during it, it’s a really nice occasion.”

Van de Zandschulp prevailed in his most recent Lexus ATP Head2Head meeting with Djokovic last year at Indian Wells, a match he remembers vividly. Entering the main draw as a lucky loser, the Dutchman produced a clinical deciding-set performance to spring the upset.

“I didn’t feel great at that time, but now I am feeling a little bit better tennis-wise,” Van de Zandschulp said, reflecting on their Indian Wells clash. “Hopefully that helps me… Here in Australia, it’s one of his favourite tournaments, one of his favourite courts, so it will be a different test. He was struggling there [in Indian Wells]. The conditions were tough: pretty hot, pretty bouncy.”

Djokovic is far from the only superstar Van de Zandschulp has tested — and toppled — in recent seasons. He stunned Alcaraz in the second round of the 2024 US Open and, two months later, famously brought Nadal’s storied career to a close at the Davis Cup Finals.

Each victory offered a different form of validation, reinforcing his ability not only to match the sport’s elite shot for shot, but also to manage the moment and the magnitude of the occasion.

“Beating Alcaraz over five sets is not an easy task, but beating him 3-0 was something I couldn’t imagine before stepping on court,” Van de Zandschulp said. “[Beating] Rafa was also pretty special because it’s not often in tennis you know who you are going to play a month in advance.

“I found out that it was going to be his last tournament and that we were going to play Spain in the quarters. If he was going to play, I would be the one to play him, so I thought a lot about the match when usually you don’t have time to. That was, mentally, the toughest match for me.”

<img alt=”Rafael Nadal, Botic van de Zandschulp” style=”width:100%;” src=”/-/media/images/news/2026/01/22/15/18/nadal-botic-davis-cup-2024-1.jpg” />

When Van de Zandschulp walks onto Rod Laver Arena this weekend, it will mark his third consecutive year competing on the iconic stage. He fell to Jannik Sinner and Alex de Minaur in first-round encounters in the past two editions of the hard-court major. Those were experiences that, while bruising, have helped remove the novelty of the occasion.

Now, the Dutchman is back in the Australian Open third round for the first time since 2022, having dropped just one set en route after victories over 27th seed Brandon Nakashima and Shang Juncheng.

“I’m really happy about it. It’s been a while since I won a match here,” said Van de Zandschulp. “The last two years, I had some tough draws with Sinner and De Minaur in the first round. But I’m playing some good tennis again – I started the season pretty well.

“It’s good I already played there [Rod Laver Arena] as it’s nothing new, but it’s still going to be a huge challenge.”

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Part of that renewed confidence can be traced back to a more settled offseason — a rarity in recent years. With Davis Cup commitments stretching deep into November, Van de Zandschulp has often had limited time to reset physically and mentally.

“The last couple of years, we have played Davis Cup in November, so the offseason has been pretty tough, pretty busy,” he added. “Now I already had three weeks off, five weeks practice, so I think that did me pretty well, especially for the mind, being at home a little bit longer. I really enjoyed my offseason and have started fresh.”

Against Djokovic on his most decorated stage, Van de Zandschulp will once again arrive as the underdog. Yet history suggests that is a role he knows how to embrace.

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