Tennis News

From around the world

2026 Rotterdam tennis prize money

  • Posted: Feb 04, 2026

The ABN AMRO Open in Rotterdam, Netherlands, which this year runs from 9-15 February, has announced a prize money total of €2,462,660 for the 2026 edition.

The singles champion will earn €460,555. The winning doubles team will split €151,280.

View the full prize-money breakdown and the PIF ATP Rankings points at stake below.

[NO 1 CLUB]

2026 Rotterdam Singles Prize Money

Rounds  Points  Prize Money 
 Winner  500  €460,555
 Finalist  330  €247,800
 Semi-finalist  200  €132,060
 Quarter-finalist  100  €67,470
 Round of 16  50  €36,015
Round of 32   0  €19,205

2026 Rotterdam Doubles Prize Money (per team)

 Rounds Points  Prize Money 
 Winner 500   €151,280
 Finalist 300  €80,680
 Semi-finalist  180  €40,820
 Quarter-finalist  90  €20,420
 Round of 16  0  €10,560
[NEWSLETTER FORM]

Source link

Wawrinka downs Medjedovic for historic win in Montpellier

  • Posted: Feb 04, 2026

Stan Wawrinka made history at the Open Occitanie Wednesday.

With his 7-6(3), 6-4 win over Hamad Medjedovic in the opening round, the 40-year-old, competing in his final season on Tour, became the oldest man to record a tour-level win indoors outside the Davis Cup since Ken Rosewall (45) in Melbourne in 1980.

“I always enjoy. I’m still passionate about the game,” Wawrinka said. “For me, [it] was important to keep pushing myself and trying to win as much as possible.”

The Swiss relied on his experience in his maiden Lexus ATP Head2Head meeting against 22-year-old Medjedovic. He won 83 per cent (24/29) of his first-serve points, according to Infosys ATP Stats, cruising to victory in one hour and 38 minutes. He fended off 80 per cent (4/5) of the break points he faced, including a crucial save at 5-5 30/40 in the opening set.

“It is always a pleasure to play the young generation. I was happy to face him for the first time. Tough player. I am happy with the level. It is a pleasure to be back here,” he said.

He will next play defending champion Felix Auger-Aliassime.

[NO 1 CLUB]

Eighth seed Aleksandar Kovacevic spoiled the hopes of 16-year-old Moise Kouame on Wednesday in Montpellier, where the French teenager was aiming for his first tour-level win. Kovacevic, a finalist last year in Montpellier, rallied to a 6-7(5), 6-2, 6-2 victory after one hour, 54 minutes.

Kovacevic won 82 per cent of his first-serve points (41/50), according to Infosys ATP Stats, and did not face a break point until his final service game of the match, which he erased before applying the finishing touches on his fourth tour-level win of 2026.

“He was outplaying me in the first set,” Kovacevic said of Kouame. “I didn’t feel super comfortable, first match of the week. And then I got settled in a little bit and I think he dropped his level just a tad. It’s tough to play a player like that, I’ve never really seen him play at all, but definitely impressed.”

Kouame, was seeking to become the seventh man this century to win a tour-level match before his 17th birthday. The teenager advanced through qualifying, becoming the youngest man to qualify for an ATP Tour event since Rudolf Molleker in 2017.

The American will next face another French qualifier, Titouan Droguet, who beat Kovacevic 7-6(4), 7-6(8) last week at the Quimper Challenger.

[NEWSLETTER FORM]

Source link

How a tire change underpinned Skupski's return to doubles World No. 1

  • Posted: Feb 04, 2026

Neal Skupski has returned to the summit of the PIF ATP Doubles Rankings, climbing to World No. 1 for the first time in 29 months.

The Briton’s rise to the top was sealed in emphatic fashion, having won the Australian Open alongside Christian Harrison. Their partnership only started this offseason and featured a memorable beginning, with the duo changing a tire together. Following the pair’s triumph in Melbourne, Skupski skyrocketed from No. 9 to No. 1.

“I knew then that there was a chance of getting back to World No. 1,” said the 36-year-old Skupski. “I think that’s the best way to get No. 1 — winning a Grand Slam.”

Harrison and Skupski were competing in their second tournament together in Melbourne, arriving at the season’s first major after a semi-final run in Adelaide. Down a set in the opening round of the Australian Open and twice facing 0/40 on their serve in the second set, Harrison and Skupski dug out of early trouble against Jakob Schnaitter and Mark Wallner.

“We watched a lot of film after that to see where we could improve,” said Skupski. “And it definitely helped us moving forward throughout the two weeks.”

Harrison and Skupski downed home favourites Jason Kubler and Marc Polmans 7-6(4), 6-4 in the championship match. The pair’s teamwork and chemistry, which formed in the offseason in an unexpected manner, proved effective as the duo did not drop a set after its first-round scare.

“Probably our first team bonding event was changing one of Christian’s tires,” Skupski said. “Christian came to Baton Rouge to do preseason with me in December for one week. He got a flat on his rental car, so we did that as a team together. It was quite funny.”

[NO 1 CLUB]

Skupski has amassed 18 tour-level doubles titles across his standout career, including two major crowns (2023 Wimbledon, alongside Wesley Koolhof). In November 2022, Skupski ascended to No. 1 in the PIF ATP Doubles Rankings for the first time. A three-time qualifier for the prestigious Nitto ATP Finals, Skupski most recently held No. 1 honours in August 2023.

“I think the only thing that was different was the first time being very nervous going into one of the matches in the end of 2022 knowing that if I won that match in Paris, we knew we’d be No. 1, me and Koolhof,” said Skupski.

After reflecting on his journey back to the top, Skupski is already looking ahead to new challenges and goals in 2026.

“Getting back to World No. 1 definitely brings confidence and it’s been a great start to the year with Christian,” said Skupski. “Now it’s time to push on again and we need to reevaluate our goals.

“Winning a Grand Slam was one of our goals at the start of the season, so we’ll have to think about that and come up with new targets.”

[NEWSLETTER FORM]

Source link

How Alcaraz, Nadal combined to make Spanish history

  • Posted: Feb 03, 2026

Carlos Alcaraz added another golden chapter to Spanish tennis history on Sunday, when he lifted the Australian Open trophy to complete the Career Grand Slam and join Rafael Nadal in one of the sport’s most exclusive clubs.

With his triumph in Melbourne, the 22-year-old became the second Spanish man to win the Australian Open men’s singles title, following Nadal’s victories in 2009 and 2022. More significantly, Spain became the only country in the Open Era to have produced two men who have won the Career Grand Slam, with Alcaraz joining fellow ATP No. 1 Club member Nadal in the history books.

The Career Grand Slam has been achieved by only a select group of players in men’s tennis. Alongside Alcaraz and Nadal, the list includes Switzerland’s Roger Federer, Serbian Novak Djokovic, American Andre Agassi and Australian Rod Laver.

Career Grand Slam (Men, Open Era)

Player Age Title won to complete feat
Carlos Alcaraz 22 years, 272 days 2026 Australian Open
Rod Laver* 24 years, 32 days 1962 US National Championships
Rafael Nadal 24 years, 102 days 2010 US Open
Roger Federer 27 years, 303 days 2009 Roland Garros
Novak Djokovic 29 years, 15 days 2016 Roland Garros
Andre Agassi  29 years, 68 days 1999 Roland Garros

*Laver completed the Career Grand Slam as an amateur in 1962, and in the Open Era in 1969

[NO 1 CLUB]

The occasion was even more special with Nadal in the stands at Melbourne Park. It marked the first time the 22-time major champion had attended the Australian Open since his last appearance at the major in 2023, offering a rare opportunity for him to watch his countryman compete on one of tennis’ biggest stages.

“For me it’s a little bit weird seeing Rafa in the stands. I think it’s the first time [he has watched me play] professionally, if I’m not wrong,” Alcaraz said during the trophy ceremony. “I know you watched me when I was 14 or 15 years old, so it’s been a long time. It’s such an honour playing in front of you. We had great battles on the court… Now seeing you watch my match, it’s just a privilege.”

Nadal completed his own Career Grand Slam at the 2010 US Open, aged 24 years and 88 days, becoming the first Spanish man to achieve the feat. More than 15 years later, Alcaraz followed the same path.

Alcaraz, who was making his 20th major appearance, improved to 7-1 in Grand Slam finals. He has won each of the other three majors (Roland Garros, Wimbledon, US Open) twice. The No. 1 player in the PIF ATP Rankings is the youngest male in the Open Era to win seven major singles titles. Alcaraz is now level with Djokovic at 5-5 in the pair’s Lexus ATP Head2Head series and is the 12th player to have defeated the Serbian on five or more occasions.

[NEWSLETTER FORM]

Source link

Fils wins first match since August in Montpellier

  • Posted: Feb 03, 2026

Arthur Fils made a triumphant return to the ATP Tour on Tuesday at the Open Occitanie Montpellier, where he overcame Valentin Royer 7-6(7), 6-7(4), 6-2.

Competing for the first time since August, the dynamic Frenchman saved one set point in the first set and produced a thrilling third-set display to raise the roof at the ATP 250 indoor event. Fils, who has been battling a back injury since the end of May, had last tasted victory in July in Toronto.

“It was a tough match. He is a great opponent and he put me under pressure,” Fils said. “I was running a lot and my legs feel it now, but I am very happy to win. It has been a long time out of the court and [to have] an atmosphere like this was [amazing].

“At the end of the first set I felt pretty good. Then the second set started and I felt a bit worse, but I finished very strongly… I had so much fun. I was talking to my box. I am enjoying this. It has been a long time.”

[NO 1 CLUB]

The 21-year-old, who reached the semi-finals in Montpellier in 2023, has now earned 50 tour-level hard-court wins. He will continue his comeback against Ugo Blanchet, who defeated doubles star Andrea Vavassori 6-4, 6-3.

Earlier, fifth-seeded Frenchman Ugo Humbert continued his impressive home form indoors, defeating Botic van de Zandschulp 6-3, 6-4 to reach the second round. Humbert has won 19 of his past 20 matches indoors in France, lifting titles in Metz and Marseille (twice) in that time, according to the Infosys ATP Win/Loss Index.

With his 73-minute win, Humbert improved to 5-0 in his Lexus ATP Head2Head series against Van de Zandschulp.

American qualifier Martin Damm scored an upset win against seventh seed Hubert Hurkacz. The 22-year-old, currently No. 160 in the PIF ATP Rankings, recorded his third Top 100 victory in one hour and 33 minutes. Damm will face Roberto Bautista Agut in the second round.

Pablo Carreno Busta and French qualifier Titouan Droguet also earned wins at the ATP 250 event on Day 2. Carreno Busta beat Miomir Kecmanovic 4-6, 6-3, 7-6(4), while Drouget downed Jan Choinski 6-2, 7-6(2).

[NEWSLETTER FORM]

Source link

Who is 16-year-old Moise Kouame?

  • Posted: Feb 03, 2026

Moise Kouame has caught the attention of the tennis world this week. The 16-year-old became the sixth-youngest man to qualify for an ATP Tour event since 2000 at the Open Occitanie.

What should you know about the fast-rising French teenager? Read on to learn more about Kouame.

Where It All Started
Kouame began playing tennis aged six with his older brother Michael. A fan of Novak Djokovic and Jannik Sinner, Kouame considers the Serbian his idol. Kouame, a native of Sarcelles, France in the northern suburbs of Paris, trained at the National Tennis Center in Poitiers.

Need For Speed
Away from the court, Kouame enjoys F1 and golf. Kouame’s dream job is to be an F1 driver. He supports Red Bull Racing’s F1 team and also likes footballer Lionel Messi. His other hobbies include playing PlayStation, golf, chess and Skyjo.

Pop Culture Picks
Kouame’s favourite superhero is The Flash. While naming Harry Potter as his favourite movie, Kouame also enjoys TV shows Drive To Survive and Top Gear. His favourite actor is Damson Idris. His favourite musician is Michael Jackson.

Montpellier Milestone
The No. 552 player in the PIF ATP Rankings, Kouame will make his main-draw debut in Montpellier against eighth seed and last year’s finalist Aleksandar Kovacevic. Kouame, a wild card in the qualifying draw, needed a deciding set in both of his wins. He beat Elias Ymer 6-4, 4-6, 7-5 in the opening round before ousting Clement Chidekh 7-5, 6-7(6), 6-3.

Click here to view the list of the six youngest men to qualify for an ATP Tour event this century, which includes Richard Gasquet, Rafael Nadal and Kouame.

Rankings Rise
Kouame is the youngest player in the Top 1,000 of the PIF ATP Rankings. He began the year at World No. 833 and has since surged nearly 300 places. In January, Kouame captured two ITF World Tennis Tour titles on home soil.

[NEWSLETTER FORM]

Source link

Rodesch relearned to walk, now he’s climbing the Challenger circuit

  • Posted: Feb 03, 2026

Chris Rodesch was a promising junior weighing a choice between college tennis and turning pro. At age 17, he appeared set on the collegiate path, until suddenly tennis entirely disappeared from the equation.

The Luxembourger was instead learning how to walk again and perform daily tasks in 2019. Rodesch — now at a career-high No. 138 in the PIF ATP Rankings following back-to-back title runs on the ATP Challenger circuit — was diagnosed with Guillain-Barré syndrome, an auto-immune disease triggered from food poisoning he contracted at a junior tournament.

“My body just went numb,” Rodesch told ATPTour.com. “I couldn’t open bottles anymore, I couldn’t walk straight anymore. I almost couldn’t walk stairs anymore because my nerves were not responding.”

Raised in a sporting household — his father a Luxembourg national footballer and his mother a former basketball player — Rodesch had spent his childhood building elite athletic skills. Rodesch, who stands tall at 6’6” (198cm), played handball and football, but tennis “was always number one”. He was inspired to pick up a racquet after watching Rafael Nadal and Roger Federer clash in a Roland Garros final.

But Rodesch’s lifelong athletic base quickly vanished when he battled the auto-immune disease.

“I remember going to the nerve doctor for the first time and I showed him what I couldn’t do anymore because of my nerves. I couldn’t stand straight anymore,” Rodesch recalled. “I lost my balance and right away he said, ‘This is it. This is the disease. We have to hospitalise you’.”

Rodesch’s health scare was so severe that, for a period, his tennis career became an afterthought.

“In the beginning, I was not even thinking about competitive tennis anymore,” Rodesch said. “I was just thinking of being healthy again, to be able to walk to school again because I was still in high school. Tennis really became the fifth option.”

His path back to the court was a long journey, needing two years to return to the level at which he was previously playing. After three months of rehab, Rodesch began playing with a mini racquet and lightweight 10-and-under balls, aiming to rediscover the sensation of hitting a tennis ball. It took six months before Rodesch could play normally again and one year before he could start competing. It was a difficult, uncertain period.

“I saw all my friends playing these nice tournaments, the junior Grand Slams and I’m lying there in bed,” said Rodesch, who no longer lives with complications from the disease.

Even in the face of adversity, Rodesch recognised a bit of fortune. He also reflects on that frightening stretch with a sense of perspective.

“There’s people from that disease whose face gets deformed or who don’t recover from it, maybe in a wheelchair after,” he said. “It was a long process, but I had luck in the bad luck.

“I definitely learned to be patient, but also to find happiness in what we are doing here. We travel the world and we’re exploring these nice places.”

Before the illness, Rodesch was leaning towards playing college tennis in the United States and in 2020, that dream came true. He began his career at the University of Virginia, where he would become a three-time ITA All-American and graduate in 2024.

“I really give credit to the University of Virginia because I really had no results for two years with the sickness,” Rodesch said. “UVA is one of the most competitive college teams out there, so they definitely took a risk with me, giving me that scholarship, because I didn’t show them that I was ready to compete for them, I don’t think. I have to thank them so many times because they trusted me and it’s amazing from them and it shows their character.”

Following a standout career for the Cavaliers, Rodesch transitioned to the ATP Challenger circuit and has since claimed three titles at that level. His first triumph came last April in Tallahassee, where he ended Emilio Nava’s 19-match winning streak in the final.

“You always hear as a kid, ‘Challengers are kind of the stepping stone to the ATP’, and it just makes you proud to be part of this kind of history of the Challenger Tour,” Rodesch said of his maiden Challenger crown.

On Sunday, Rodesch capped a dominant two-week stretch at ATP Challenger events in Oeiras, Portugal, where he won two consecutive titles. He has plenty to be proud of, and a variety of lessons learned from overcoming Guillain-Barré syndrome.

“To be present in the moment when you achieve something big because it can go away quite fast with a thing like that,” Rodesch reflected. “I think all these little lessons I learned — being present, being patient, being positive — helps me even now sometimes going through a tough phase.”

<img alt=”Chris Rodesch wins the Oeiras Indoor 2.” style=”width:100%” src=”/-/media/images/news/2026/02/01/22/56/rodesch-oeirasch-2026-trophy.jpg” />
Chris Rodesch wins back-to-back ATP Challenger titles in Oeiras, Portugal. Credit: Beatriz Ruivo/FPT

[NEWSLETTER FORM]

Source link

Inside Holger Rune's recovery from Achilles surgery

  • Posted: Feb 03, 2026

As the biggest stars spent January competing for the crown at the Australian Open, there was one notable name missing from the schedule: Holger Rune.

The 22-year-old has been sidelined since last October, when he suffered an Achilles injury in Stockholm, bringing his season to an abrupt halt and sending him down an unexpected, but ultimately reflective, road to recovery.

“It was very unexpected,” Rune recalled to ATPTour.com. “I didn’t know quite what happened when it happened, but after that the first focus was what to do now and how to move forward.”

An MRI soon confirmed the diagnosis and surgery followed shortly after: “Luckily everything went really well,” Rune said. “My surgeon did an amazing job, the physios are great and my team is really good.”

[NO 1 CLUB]

While Rune has not competed on the ATP Tour since October, time away from match play has hardly meant time off. After two weeks of instructed rest, the Dane quickly returned to a structured routine, beginning in the gym before gradually making his way back onto the court in December.

“My time has actually been really busy, which is nice,” Rune explained. “I’ve had a very tight schedule because there are so many things to do in the rehab. It keeps me occupied during the time off.

“Right after the injury, I really needed rest anyway. I was at the end of the season and ready for a vacation, just not in this way. The first two weeks in the cast went really quickly. I was relaxing, going to the gym a little bit, and it was nice to have time off. After that it became more intense. I never thought it would be forever. I’m really young and healing really fast so far, which is good.”

One of the most encouraging milestones has been Rune’s recent return to hitting on court. After initially striking balls while restricted to one leg, the former No. 4 player in the PIF ATP Rankings is now able to train with both feet firmly planted.

“It’s amazing, especially now that I’m hitting on two legs,” Rune said. “It’s starting to feel really nice. Before it was nice too, but it’s not quite the same when you know what you’re capable of. Now it’s more fun because I can actually put some energy behind the ball.

“There’s still a lot of rehab to do, but just being back on the tennis court is really nice. I think it’s going to be helpful when I come back that I’ve kept the swing and everything going, because we don’t want other injuries from too much time off. So far I think we’ve used our time the right way.”

Away from the physio table and the practice court, Rune has discovered a rare pause in an otherwise relentless career, a chance to slow the tempo and reconnect with life beyond the Tour. Back home in Denmark, extended time with family and close friends has offered both comfort and perspective, while films, football and other sports have helped fill the quieter hours. Even then, competition is never far away, surfacing in card games, gym challenges and anything that allows him to keep that edge sharp.

“It’s nice to be more with family and close friends,” Rune said. “We don’t really get that chance normally. I have watched a lot of films, especially at the beginning after the surgery. I was on the sofa with the leg up watching Netflix and some James Bond as well. Now I’ve been to a football game, watched other sports and tried to occupy my brain with things other than tennis. I watched Formula 1 when I was in Qatar, too.

“I have always been competing since I was young. Always eager to win and fight. I had that dragon inside me on court. I still have it. This injury is a moment to show myself how much strength I have and how much I’m willing to put into it. I miss the adrenaline and competitiveness, even at home doing gym exercises or small games just to feel it again. I am getting my competitiveness out that way.”

That same drive has carried into the planning behind his recovery. Rune and his team have leaned on research and conversations with other athletes who have navigated similar setbacks, seeking reassurance and clarity in an unfamiliar situation.

“We searched a lot. With Achilles injuries, most studies are on older people, and many don’t have surgery and recovery can be a year,” Rune said. “But for athletes it’s different and quicker as we have the surgery. Surgery was the most natural thing for me to speed up the process in a healthy way.

“One football player reached out to me. He had the same injury and was back after four and a half months. There are strict guidelines and you can’t skip steps. I’m strong and young, so I believe I’ll recover quickly, but it takes hard work and smart work.”

 
 
 
 
View this post on Instagram
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

A post shared by Holger Vitus Nødskov Rune (@holgerrune)

Throughout his time away, support from fans and fellow players has been a powerful reminder of the community that exists beyond competition, something Rune admits he misses as much as the matches themselves.

“That’s one of the parts I miss most, performing on court and feeling the support. I’ve also had nice messages from a lot of players. Even though we’re competitors, we’re colleagues and want the best for each other,” Rune said.

Since breaking onto the Tour in 2021, Rune has steadily established himself among the game’s elite. He announced himself on the biggest stages early, taking a set from Novak Djokovic at the 2021 US Open as a qualifier, before lifting tour-level trophies in Munich and Stockholm in 2022.

Later that season, Rune stunned the tennis world at the ATP Masters 1000 event in Paris, defeating Djokovic to claim the biggest title of his career. The victory propelled him into the Top 10 of the PIF ATP Rankings for the first time and made him the youngest Paris champion since Boris Becker in 1986.

In the years since, he has qualified for the Nitto ATP Finals, added titles in Munich and Barcelona and remained a consistent presence inside the Top 15.

The pause has given Rune valuable space to reflect on his journey so far and reassess how he approaches the demands of life on Tour.

“When you play every week, you don’t really stop to assess things,” Rune said. “I think it’s about managing tournaments better and listening more to my body. Sometimes you push too much, and now it was too much for my body. In the future, I’ll try to look at the bigger picture, not just the next goal, but how I feel physically and mentally. I think that is important for my longer-term aims.

“But this break, I have had a chance to look back. It meant a lot [to win Barcelona]. Paris is still my most memorable win, but every title is special. Last season that was the perfect week, and Indian Wells [final] was also a great week.”

As Rune continues to build toward his return, the excitement is clear and growing with every session back on court.

“I’m so excited to get back,” Rune said. “In training now, I can really put energy behind the ball again and it feels amazing. I’m looking forward to it and I think I’ll come back stronger and hopefully have many more perfect weeks in my career.”

[NEWSLETTER FORM]

Source link