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The clay court season is on

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The clay court season is on

PHOTO ERIC GAILLARD, REUTERS

“I feel that I can improve a lot. Today, I won the title. So the objective remains the same: to work hard and in the current direction to try to progress as much as possible, ”said Andrey Rublev on Sunday after his victory in three sets against Holger Rune.

(Monte-Carlo) The first clay-court tournament of the season which will lead to Roland-Garros (May 28-June 11), the Monte-Carlo Masters 1000 does not necessarily prefigure the future, but several observations are in order: failures of Djokovic and Tsitsipas in the triumph of Rublev, inventory.

Well launched

The coronation of Andrey Rublev, 6e world, is a half-surprise. The Russian, twice quarter-finalist at Roland-Garros in 2020 and 2022, had already played two Masters 1000 finals in 2021, in Monte-Carlo then Cincinnati. Each time it had been swept away.

“I feel that I can improve a lot. Today, I won the title. So the objective remains the same: to work hard and in the current direction to try to progress as much as possible, ”he said on Sunday after his victory in three sets against Holger Rune.

The Dane confirmed to him that he intended to give himself the means of his ambitions to become the best. He had a double-break point to lead 5-1 in the deciding set in the final.

“Yes, but I couldn’t conclude […]. I have to see what I did wrong, what I can do better, and move on because the most important tournament on clay is Roland-Garros and what matters is to be ready for this tournament. there, ”analyzed the Dane.

Winner of the Masters 1000 in Paris in November having beaten Novak Djokovic in the final, the man who will celebrate his 20th birthday on April 29 can boast of having clearly dominated in Monte-Carlo, Daniil Medvedev (4e) then Jannik Sinner (8e).

The latter also succeeded in his transition between the hard American (half in Indian Wells, final in Miami) and clay, even if he failed in the half in the Principality, after a sacred showdown against Rune.

wrong parties


PHOTO HANNAH MCKAY, REUTERS ARCHIVES

Rafael Nadal, the king of clay, gave up at the last moment to play in Monte-Carlo where he holds the record for titles (11).

Rafael Nadal worried. The king of the earth, fallen back to 14e world rank, gave up at the last moment to play in the Principality, where he holds the record for titles (11). And, during the tournament, he also announced his withdrawal from Barcelona this week, still insufficiently recovered from the hip injury he has suffered since losing the second round of the Australian Open in January.

He only has the Masters 1000 in Madrid and Rome left before Roland-Garros where he will aim for a fifteenth title, to bring to 23 the record of Grand Slam titles that he co-holds with Djokovic.

He will celebrate his 37th birthday on June 3, in full Major on earth.

Carlos Alcaraz (2e) also extended his convalescence to the detriment of a participation in Monte-Carlo. But, unlike his compatriot, the young Spaniard, who turns 20 on May 5, is aligned with Barcelona.

Last year, after a grueling American tour (like this year), he was eliminated from entry to Monte Carlo before winning Barcelona and Madrid.

The unknown Djokovic. An injury to his right arm in training two days before his start probably cut his wings.

The Serb, who has won only two of his 38 Masters 1000 (record) in Monte-Carlo, appeared particularly dejected after his defeat in the eighth.

“What I feel after playing like that, it’s really horrible,” he admitted, not wanting to talk about his arm.

Stefanos Tsitsipas (5e) also fell from above. Double title holder, he trumpeted his love of the land before the start of the tournament, but was stopped in the quarters by the American Taylor Fritz (10e), yet not very adept at this surface.

The Norwegian Casper Ruud (3e) seems for the moment far from the level which had allowed him to be a finalist at Roland-Garros last year. After winning the Estoril tournament by beating underage players there, he fell ingloriously in the round of 16 in Monte-Carlo against Jan-Lennard Struff (64e).

Encouraging


PHOTO VALERY HACHE, AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE

“I have to get used to playing on clay again, to slide,” explained Alexander Zverev.

Alexander Zverev (16e) had not played on clay since his retirement from injury in the semi-finals last year at Roland Garros when he was making life difficult for Nadal.

The German did not return to competition until January in Australia and admitted in the Principality that he was not yet at the level of last year at Roland, when he had played “the best tennis in (his ) life “.

“I have to get used to playing on clay again, to slide,” he explained after his first-round victory against the whimsical Alexander Bublik.

He then passed a test by dismissing the “earthling” Roberto Bautista, before losing to Daniil Medvedev (4e).

The Russian confirmed in the Principality that he hated this surface, but also underlined that he believed he could obtain good results there.

He reached the quarter-finals, where he couldn’t beat Rune.

“I beat good clay players”, he analyzed, stressing that the evening against Zverev had been “magical”.

Source: lapresse

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Australian Open A first meeting with Sabalenka for Mboko

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Australian Open A first meeting with Sabalenka for Mboko

(Melbourne) Luxury brands took center stage at the Australian Open, where Belarusian Aryna Sabalenka and Canadian Victoria Mboko advanced to the fourth round.

But when the world number one women’s tennis player takes on one of the sport’s rising young stars, it will only be about tennis.

Top seed Sabalenka beat Anastasia Potapova 7-6 (4), 7-6 (7) and Mboko, 19, eliminated Clara Tauson, 14e seeded, 7-6 (5), 5-7, 6-3 to earn their bye to the round of 16.

Sabalenka has won the Australian Open twice and reached the final at Melbourne Park last year. She also has two US Open titles. Mboko is making his debut at the Australian Open this year.

Fashion was more than ever the center of attention during this tournament after Naomi Osaka’s spectacular entrance during her first round match.

Sabalenka and Mboko therefore had to answer questions about their advertising contracts, which coincide with the first Grand Slam meeting of the year: the Belarusian with Gucci and the Canadian with Rolex.

PHOTO ASANKA BRENDON RATNAYAKE, ASSOCIATED PRESS

Aryna Sabalenka

But on Friday, the focus was mainly on the upcoming match between two players with very different experiences.

“First of all, I never spoke to her, I never had the opportunity to play or train with her. I only saw her outside,” Sabalenka said of Mboko.

I watched a few matches. Yes, she is an excellent player. She’s a fighter. She plays very well, with combative tennis.

Aryna Sabalenka on Victoria Mboko

Sabalenka is playing at the Australian Open for the eighth time, has won 22 titles on the tour and earned more than $45 million in purses during her career.

She was long considered one of the sport’s most promising players, but she had to overcome stage fright and service problems. It was only in her fourth appearance at the Australian Open that she qualified for the second week of the tournament.

“I think for me it would have been very difficult to deal with success at such a young age,” Sabalenka said.

“But when I see these girls, so young and who have already accomplished so much, who play tennis so well and who are so mature, I find it incredible. I feel like they mature a lot faster than me. »

Mboko acknowledged that this will be a big step forward, on and off the court. She is only making her fourth appearance at a Grand Slam tournament, and her first participation in the round of 16 at this stage of one of the four biggest events in world tennis.

She won two WTA titles, the first last August in Montreal – in the WTA 1000 category – when she was 18 years old and benefited from a pass from the organizers of the National Bank Open.

“I think it’s super cool. I have never played against the current world number 1. It will be a very different experience,” admitted the Canadian.

“I guess we will also play on the Rod Laver court. I’ve never played on center court at a Grand Slam either. Lots of first times. I think it’s really cool to be able to do this on Sunday. Just to show what I’m capable of. »

Sabalenka has built a large following by being very active on social media, attracting new fans to tennis and giving her existing supporters a behind-the-scenes look.

Sabalenka takes her role as an ambassador to the public and a positive influence for young players very seriously. Mboko is about to have his first up-close experience.

“That’s my only priority: to be a good example, to show that it’s possible to find a balance, that you have to know how to have fun while remaining focused on your career,” she explains.

“I want to prevent young people from making the same mistake as me, namely devoting themselves exclusively to tennis, which generates a lot of pressure and ends up destroying you from the inside. »

Source: lapresse

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PHOTOGRAPH. The 1/8 final of the Aus Open awaits you. How it happened: Svitolina punished Schneider

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PHOTOGRAPH. The 1/8 final of the Aus Open awaits you. How it happened: Svitolina punished Schneider

January 23, Ukraine’s first racket Elina Svitolina I was interested in the Russian woman Diana Schneider In the 1/16 final of the Australian Open 2026.

The Ukrainian player won with a score of 7:6 (7:4) in two sets, 6:3 in 1 hour and 35 minutes. This was the first head-to-head meeting between the rivals.

The best moments of tennis matches LIVE on Telegram channel Tennis on Sport.ua

Spor.ua invites you to look at the photo gallery of the Svitolina – Schneider match!

In the 1/8 final of the Australian Open, Elina will compete with the eighth seed Mirra Andreeva.

Australian Open 2026. 1/16 final

Elina Svitolina [12] – Diana Schneider – 7:6 (7:4), 6:3

PHOTOGRAPH. The 1/8 final of the Aus Open awaits you. How it happened: Svitolina punished Schneider

Source: Sport UA

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Svitolina’s opponent in the 2026 Australian Open 1/8 final has been announced

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Svitolina’s opponent in the 2026 Australian Open 1/8 final has been announced

Ukraine’s first racket Elina Svitolina (WTA 12) has determined her opponent in the Australian Open 2026 1/8 final.

In the fourth round of the major in Melbourne, the Ukrainian will play against the seventh “neutral” racket in the world Mirra AndreevaDefeated the Romanian representative in the third round match Elena-Gabriela Ruse (WTA 79).

The best moments of tennis matches LIVE on Telegram channel Tennis on Sport.ua

Andreeva defeated Ruse in two sets with scores of 6:3 and 6:4 in 1 hour and 37 minutes.

Svitolina had played against Andreeva only once before – in March 2025, Elina lost to Mirra in the quarterfinals of the WTA 1000 competition in Indian Wells.

Svitolina knocked out another “neutral” Diana Schneider in the 1/16 final of the Australian Open.

Australian Open 2026. 1/16 final

Elena-Gabriela Ruse (Romania) – Mirra Andreeva [8] – 3:6, 4:6

Video review of the match

Source: Sport UA

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