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Fritz Fires Past Wawrinka

  • Posted: Apr 12, 2023

Fritz Fires Past Wawrinka

The American will next meet Lehecka

Taylor Fritz earned his 50th ATP Masters 1000 win on Wednesday when he overcame former champion Stan Wawrinka 7-6(10), 6-2 at the Rolex Monte-Carlo Masters to reach the third round.

In a tale of two sets, the American saved five set points in a mammoth opener to move ahead, before he stepped up his intensity and level in the second set to triumph after one hour and 39 minutes.

Fritz, who saved two set points on serve at 5-6 and three more in the first-set tie-break, struck 25 winners and committed just seven unforced errors to earn his 21st tour-level win of the season.


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The eighth seed reached the quarter-finals in the Principality last year and will aim to match that feat when he takes on Jiri Lehecka after the Czech downed 2022 semi-finalist Grigor Dimitrov 7-6(4), 6-4.

Fritz arrives in Monte-Carlo off the back of a run to the quarter-finals in Miami. He lifted his maiden ATP Masters 1000 trophy in Indian Wells in 2021.

Wawrinka was making his 13th appearance at the clay-court event, with his best result a run to the title in 2014.

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Medvedev Marches Past Sonego, Meets Zverev Next In Monte-Carlo

  • Posted: Apr 12, 2023

Medvedev Marches Past Sonego, Meets Zverev Next In Monte-Carlo

Third seed posts Tour-leading 30th win of 2023 season

A change of surface, but no change in Daniil Medvedev’s ability to dominate opponents.

The third seed made an electric start to his 2023 Rolex Monte-Carlo Masters campaign on Wednesday by defeating the dangerous free-hitting Italian Lorenzo Sonego 6-3, 6-2.

Medvedev was dialled in from the start of his first clay-court match of the year. He moved into an early 3-0 lead with the help of some delightful early touches at the net and he stayed typically relentless from the baseline throughout to seal an 89-minute victory on Court Rainier III.

“Every match is a struggle [on clay], but I have had some good matches on clay,” said Medvedev. “I managed to play good against a very strong player on clay. Lorenzo is very strong. Here in Monte-Carlo there are a lot of Italians in the crowd, but a lot of French also, so it was fun to play, and I am happy to beat such a tough opponent.”

The World No. 45 Sonego has the weapons to hurt anyone on Tour on his day, but the wild card struggled to turn vocal support from the Italian fans in the crowd into consistency that could challenge Medvedev. The World No. 5 fended off the only break point he faced and won 90 per cent (27/30) of points behind his first serve to clinch his 25th win in his past 26 tour-level matches.

“It’s completely different on clay, but confidence is confidence,” said the 19-time tour-level titlist Medvedev. “It’s about winning matches, because it is always two players that play, and one is going to win… I hope to bring this confidence even further.”

Medvedev, who has lifted hard-court trophies in Rotterdam, Doha, Dubai and Miami during his recent red-hot run, moves on to a third-round showdown against Alexander Zverev at the ATP Masters 1000 event. The 13th seed earlier eased past Roberto Bautista Agut 6-4, 6-4. It will be the 14th tour-level clash between Medvedev and Zverev, but the first on clay.

“We’ve had some tough matches,” said Medvedev, who leads Zverev 7-6 in the pair’s ATP Head2Head series. “We played for the first time maybe seven years ago on the ATP Tour, and in juniors maybe 12 years ago. I remember I beat him once in a final on clay in juniors, but it’s going to be a different story.

“I saw him in the first two matches, he seemed to be in good shape. I’m just going to have to be at my best.”

Another seeded player to notch a confident second-round win on Wednesday was Karen Khachanov. The ninth seed downed Ilya Ivashka 7-6(2), 6-2 to set a third-round showdown against fifth seed Andrey Rublev.

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The Nomadic Life With… Lorenzo Musetti

  • Posted: Apr 12, 2023

The Nomadic Life With… Lorenzo Musetti

Learn about the Italian’s life off court

World No. 21 Lorenzo Musetti has become one of the game’s brightest young stars. A two-time tour-level titlist, the 21-year-old looks to earn one of the biggest wins of his career Thursday, when he meets 22-time major champion Novak Djokovic at the Rolex Monte-Carlo Masters.

ATPTour.com caught up with the Italian to discuss his life on Tour, his favourite travel destinations, and how he makes himself feel at home while on the road.

What are two essential non-tennis items you always pack for trips?
Probably headphones and a speaker. I’m pretty obsessed with the music, so I’d say those two things.

When you’re in your room or in the gym, you have music on all the time?
Yeah, with my playlist for sure.

What’s the number one song you listen to?
Depends on the period. I have a lot of playlists. It depends on the mood and when. Right now, I have some Italian songs.

Have you ever forgotten something on a trip that caused problems?
I have forgotten headphones on the plane. I remember it was in Canada so it was not easy. I tried to contact the airline but no lucky results. It was when I was playing juniors.

How much do you enjoy travelling?
It’s one of the nicest things we have in this sport and in our life. You cannot be a tennis player if you don’t like travelling, it would be some sort of opposite thing. For us, we travel the world to try to discover new places, new countries. For me it’s kind of fun and something I’ve always liked. That’s why also I play tennis.

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Have you ever played a tournament because you wanted to see the city?
Honestly, no. I’ve had the opportunity to visit a lot of cities for tennis but I never choose one tournament for the city. I’d say it’s for the condition or for the tournament instead.

What’s been your favourite city on Tour and why?
Not including Italy, I would say I like New York a lot. The energy that the city gives you is something unreal. I always like to go to the US Open.

Is there a particular place in New York you like to visit?
Times Square is something you live like in a movie. It’s something really memorable, especially your first time there.

Where’s your favourite place to go for vacation?
Last year I went to Maldives and it was really, really nice. I’d probably say that.

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How much do you think of taking care of your body while travelling?
I try to be as professional as I can, especially when you don’t find something healthy. Especially with food when you go somewhere where you don’t know where to eat, where the meat comes from, you have to adapt yourself like everybody does.

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When you’re on the road, how do you make yourself feel at home?
Going to Italian restaurants. It’s probably the most common thing for my country.

Do you have any tips to get over jetlag?
No, just try to sleep as much as I can on the plane. Try to rest when you get there and plan the practice on the right hours.

Do you like to get to the airport with a lot of time or you don’t like to wait?
I’m the kind who doesn’t like to be late. I’d probably say get there with more time than less.

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Sinner Advances After Schwartzman Retires

  • Posted: Apr 12, 2023

Sinner Advances After Schwartzman Retires

Italian next plays Hurkacz

Jannik Sinner advanced to the third round at the Rolex Monte-Carlo Masters on Wednesday when Diego Schwartzman was forced to retire with a shoulder injury.

The Italian, who reached the quarter-finals in Monte-Carlo last year, produced a ruthless performance in his first clay-court appearance of the season. He overpowered the Argentine with his flat groundstrokes and committed just six unforced errors before Schwartzman was forced to retire with Sinner leading 6-0, 3-1 after 38 minutes.

“I could tell from the beggining he was struggling a lot,” Sinner said. “On the left side with the pain. I wish him the best and hopefully it is nothing serious.”


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Sinner is competing at the Principality at a career-high No. 8 in the Pepperstone ATP Rankings after advancing to his second ATP Masters 1000 final in Miami earlier this month. The 21-year-old will next face 10th seed Hubert Hurkacz.

“I haven’t had loads of time to prepare, but I am happy to play here and play in front of Italian fans,” Sinner said. “Just enjoying every moment and trying my best and having a great attitude every time I step onto the court. I feel not so bad on clay.”

Schwartzman and Sinner were teaming as doubles partners this week. After winning their opening match, the Argentine-Italian pair lost in the second round against Fabrice Martin and Andreas Mies.

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Ruud Up & Running In Monte-Carlo

  • Posted: Apr 12, 2023

Ruud Up & Running In Monte-Carlo

Fourth seed moves past Van de Zandschulp, faces Struff next

Casper Ruud did not have things all his own way on Wednesday at the Rolex Monte-Carlo Masters, but he raised his level when needed to earn his fifth consecutive win.

The Norwegian saved one set point at 4-5, 30/40 in the second set and recovered from failing to serve out the match at 6-5 to eventually overcome Dutchman Botic van de Zandschulp 7-5, 7-6(1) at the clay-court event.

“It is never easy to start at a new tournament and against a player I have lost to before,” Ruud said. “Also more recently in Miami this year, which was a tough three-setter. I was a bit sloppy and didn’t take my chances. Sometimes it is a little tricky playing someone you recently lost to, like ‘Not again’, but in this case I was a bit happy because I felt like some unfinished business from the Miami match.”

Ruud, who reached the semi-finals in the Principality in 2021, is chasing his first ATP Masters 1000 crown this week. The fourth seed will play Jan-Lennard Struff in the third round after the German upset 14th-seeded Australian Alex de Minaur 6-3, 6-2.

After failing to win consecutive matches at any tour-level event at the start of 2023, Ruud enjoyed a confidence-boosting run to his ninth clay-court title in Estoril last week.

“It felt great last week in Estoril,” Ruud said. “It felt very comfortable. Today was at times a very good match, but at times a little rusty. There are a lot of positives to build on and I am very happy to be here in Monte-Carlo.”

The 24-year-old, currently No. 3 in the Pepperstone ATP Live Rankings, struggled to find consistency throughout the two-hour, 16-minute clash on Court Rainier III, dropping the ball short at times which allowed the Dutchman to attack. However, he held his nerve in the second-set tie-break, racing clear to improve to 2-3 in his ATP Head2Head series against Van de Zandschulp.

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The Secret To Medvedev's Recent Success

  • Posted: Apr 11, 2023

The Secret To Medvedev’s Recent Success

Insights provided by Tennis Data Innovations

Daniil Medvedev has been on fire the past two months, winning titles in Rotterdam, Doha, Dubai and Miami while also reaching the final at Indian Wells. The secret to his success has been simple.

Dominance in tennis is often thought of as controlling play with a particularly powerful stroke, like Rafael Nadal’s forehand or Stan Wawrinka’s backhand. But Medvedev, the first-placed player in the Pepperstone ATP Live Race To Turin, has commanded the action in recent weeks by using another weapon: consistency.

According to statistics provided by Tennis Data Innovations, Medvedev has thrived not on power and spin, but by putting the ball between the lines over and over again. Medvedev has laid down a challenge to his opponents: I will not miss. What will you do to stop me?

During his past five tournaments, only Carlos Alcaraz in the BNP Paribas Open final has managed to break down the Medvedev wall. The 27-year-old has won 24 of his past 25 matches behind jaw-dropping consistency.

Forehands: Medvedev vs. The Field (2023 Rotterdam, Doha, Dubai, Indian Wells & Miami)

 Stat  Daniil Medvedev  Field (5 Events Combined)
 % FH In  88.4%  85%
 Avg FH Out/Match  11  15.7

Medvedev has made 88.4 per cent of his forehand groundstrokes (not including returns) compared to 85 per cent for the field at those five tournaments. A difference of 3.4 per cent might not seem like much, but it ultimately has proven critical.

Medvedev has missed an average of 11 forehands per match compared to nearly 16 for his opponents. Matches at the highest level often come down to a few key points, so every extra mistake counts.

Opponents have hit their forehands nearly one mile per hour harder than Medvedev (76.1mph to 75.2 mph) and with more spin (2,784 rpm to 2,467 rpm), but consistency has proven more important.

The gap has been even wider elsewhere. Medvedev made 92 per cent of his backhand groundstrokes at the aforementioned five tournaments compared to 85.9 per cent for the field, missing just 9.5 backhands per match (12.4 for opponents).

Backhands: Medvedev vs. The Field

 Stat  Daniil Medvedev  Field (5 Events Combined)
 % BH In  92%  85.9%
 Avg BH Out/Match  9.5  12.4

Commentators and fans alike often discuss Medvedev’s deep return position. While some players step in to take a crack at second-serve returns, the World No. 5 remains well behind the baseline. The results have been inarguable.

Medvedev has missed an average of just two second-serve returns per match during his hot streak compared to 3.9 for the field. Not only has he rarely missed, but the 6’6” righty has also hit those shots significantly harder than opponents (75.2 mph to 71 mph).

Standing deep in the court allows Medvedev to take a bigger swing at the ball. Not only does he give himself more time to hit the ball harder, but he almost never misses those critical returns.

Second-Serve Returns: Medvedev vs. The Field

 Stat  Daniil Medvedev  Field (5 Events Combined)
 % 2nd-Serve Ret In  90.7%  83.3%
 Avg 2nd-Serve Ret Out/Match  2  3.9

It has not been a case of Medvedev locking down against lesser opponents, either. In the final of the Dubai Duty Free Tennis Championships against Top 10 star Andrey Rublev, Medvedev made an astonishing 100 per cent of his backhand groundstrokes (not including returns) and 100 per cent of his second-serve returns.

Rublev is one of the biggest ball-strikers on the ATP Tour, especially on the forehand side. Medvedev kept his cool and put up his defensive wall. It was not a small sample size. Medvedev made all 61 of his backhand groundstrokes in that match according to the data.

In the Miami Open presented by Itau final against Jannik Sinner, another of the Tour’s biggest hitters, Medvedev made 88 per cent of his forehand groundstrokes, 94 per cent of his backhand groundstrokes and 92.6 per cent of his second-serve returns.

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Medvedev’s Transition To Clay: ‘I Definitely Have To Change My Game’

Medvedev’s magic has not been in the sizzle of flashy winners — and he has hit his fair share of those — but in his consistency. Will he be able to maintain that during the clay-court season, starting this week at the Rolex Monte-Carlo Masters? The third seed will certainly try.

“You can’t change what you do in nine months or a year drastically,” Medvedev said of the surface change during his pre-tournament press conference. “So I have to find a good balance where I still play my game, with a little change, with some shots in the right moment.”

For the most part, that means staying consistent. Medvedev begins his clay season on Wednesday against Italian wild card Lorenzo Sonego.

Editor’s Note: Data comes from automated ball and player tracking data.

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Preview: Rune Faces Thiem Test In Monte-Carlo Opener

  • Posted: Apr 11, 2023

Preview: Rune Faces Thiem Test In Monte-Carlo Opener

Fritz meets Wawrinka; Medvedev, Ruud, Sinner to see first action

The only five players in the Rolex Monte-Carlo Masters singles draw who have yet to open their campaigns will do so on Wednesday as the second round comes to a close in Monaco.

Sixth seed Holger Rune meets the resurgent Dominic Thiem in the Monaco evening showpiece, while eight seed Taylor Fritz starts his clay-court swing against Stan Wawrinka. Third seed Daniil Medvedev will look to continue his red-hot run on a new surface against Lorenzo Sonego, while Casper Ruud seeks to back up his Estoril title run in his opening match against Botic van de Zandschulp. Seventh seed Jannik Sinner rounds out the openers with his matchup against Diego Schwartzman.

ATPTour.com breaks down the biggest matches from the Day 4 slate in the Principality. Only 16 singles competitors will remain at the conclusion of play.

View Schedule | View Singles Draw | View Doubles Draw


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[6] Holger Rune (DEN) vs. [WC] Dominic Thiem (AUS)

Rune has reached two semi-finals this season, in Montpellier and Acapulco, consolidating his place in the Top 10 of the Pepperstone ATP Rankings. But after his breakthrough title run at the Rolex Paris Masters last November, which lifted him into the Top 10 for the first time, the Dane went 3-2 at the first two ATP Masters 1000s of this season in Indian Wells and Miami.

Now back in action at that prestigious level, the 19-year-old faces another tough test. There was no shame in his defeats to Wawrinka and Fritz at the past two events, but he will be eager to avoid another early exit on the red clay of Monte-Carlo against Thiem.

The Austrian ended a five-match losing streak with a quarter-final run in Estoril last week, and he carried that form into Monte-Carlo, where he earned his first Masters 1000 win since last year in Rome with a 6-1, 6-4 victory against Richard Gasquet. 

“It is important to get matches and you only get them if you win, so last week was a very good step with the quarter-finals,” Thiem said after playing perhaps his best match of 2023. “Here [it] is very nice to win a match, and it is my first win at an [ATP Masters] 1000 tournament for a long time.”

Tuesday’s meeting on Court Rainier III will be the pair’s first ATP Head2Head matchup.

[8] Taylor Fritz (USA) vs. Stan Wawrinka (SUI)

Fritz’s recent rise to the Top 5 of the Pepperstone ATP Rankings was largely built on hard-court success. The 2022 BNP Paribas Open champion stands at World No. 10 entering Monte-Carlo after quarter-final runs at both Indian Wells and Miami, with eight of his 10 ATP Tour finals coming on hard courts and the other two on grass (Eastbourne titles in 2019 and 2022).

Having established himself among the ATP Tour’s elite over the past year, aided by a semi-final run in his Nitto ATP Finals debut, Fritz will now seek to make his mark on clay.

Wawrinka, his opening opponent in Monte-Carlo, believes the Netflix Break Point star is more than capable of continued success on the dirt.

“He is an amazing player,” the Swiss said of Fritz. “He is Top 10, been winning a lot of matches, winning a lot of tournaments. He is very dangerous on many surfaces.”

A champion in Monte-Carlo in 2014, and at Roland Garros one year later, Wawrinka has a long history of clay success. He won the first of his 16 tour-level titles on the clay of Umag in 2006 and owns seven titles on the surface.

The 38-year-old used every bit of his experience to earn a comeback 5-7, 6-3, 6-4 opening win against Tallon Griekspoor on Monday in Monte-Carlo. If he can find a way past Fritz on Court des Princes, it would mark the fourth straight event in which he has recorded at least two victories following a five-set defeat to Alex Molcan in the Australian Open first round.

[3] Daniil Medvedev vs. Lorenzo Sonego (ITA)

Medvedev makes no secret of the fact that clay is not his favourite surface. But the 27-year-old is prepared to adapt his game to the slower conditions as he seeks to maintain the momentum of a scorching stretch that has seen him reach five straight finals and win four titles, culminating with his maiden Miami triumph.

“I definitely have to change my game because my strokes are too flat and clay does not let the ball go through the court as much,” Medvedev said in his pre-tournament press conference. “My opponents can use those [shots against me].

“At the same time, you can’t change what you do in nine months or a year drastically, so I have to find a good balance where I still play my game, with a little change, with some shots in the right moment.”

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Sonego, his opening opponent, has proven his ability on all surfaces, with his three ATP Tour titles split between grass, clay and hard courts. The Italian gave Medvedev all he could handle earlier this season in Adelaide in what was the first match of 2023 for both men. In what was their lone previous ATP Head2Head meeting, Medvedev saved nine set points to steal the opener, with Sonego ultimately retiring in the second set due to leg cramps.

Fatigue could be a factor again on Wedneday as Sonego enters their Monte-Carlo meeting without a rest day following his 3-6, 7-5, 7-5 win against Ugo Humbert, during which he saved a match point in stunning fashion.

Also In Action…

In addition to Rune vs. Thiem and Medvedev vs. Sonego, two more marquee matchups are set for Court Rainier III on Wednesday.

Fourth seed Ruud will open the day’s play on the stadium court against van de Zandschulp. The 2022 Roland Garros finalist has won the past two clay events he’s played, in Gstaad last July and in Estoril last week, giving him an eight-match winning streak on his best surface.

Following that, seventh seed Jannik Sinner takes on Diego Schwartzman. The opponents were on the same side of the net in Monte-Carlo doubles action, scoring an opening win before a second-round defeat. Sinner will look to build on semi-final and final runs in Indian Wells and Miami, respectively, while Schwartzman aims to kickstart his 2023 campaign by backing up his opening win against David Goffin.

In Wednesday’s doubles action, top seeds Wesley Koolhof and Neal Skupski meet singles stars Karen Khachanov and Andrey Rublev, while Petros Tsitsipas and Stefanos Tsitsipas look to continue their run against third seeds Marcelo Arevalo and Jean-Julien Rojer.

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Djokovic: 'Clay Most Challenging Surface To Adapt'

  • Posted: Apr 11, 2023

Djokovic: ‘Clay Most Challenging Surface To Adapt’

The Serbian is seeking a third crown in the Principality

Lacking match play and lacing up for his first clay-court contest of the season, Novak Djokovic wasn’t surprised that his first ATP Masters 1000 outing of the year wasn’t all smooth sailing.

Playing his first match in five weeks, and his first in Monte-Carlo since last year’s early upset to Alejandro Davidovich Fokina, the World No. 1 kicked off his Rolex Monte-Carlo Masters title quest with a 7-6(5), 6-2 second-round victory against qualifier Ivan Gakhov. The Serbian has won 16 of 17 matches this year, but still had moments of uncertainty against the left-handed World No. 198.

“Match play is what I need,” Djokovic said in his post-match press conference. “Practice points is something that helps, but nothing helps as [much as] playing an official match. So that’s why I’m hoping I can have as many matches as possible this week.

“I’m really glad I overcame the first step, because I hope things will be better and easier from this point onwards.”

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Despite being a two-time champion in the Principality and holding 18 tour-level titles on clay, the World No. 1 stated that this time of year always brings a fresh test.

“Clay surface for me is the most challenging surface to adapt, to get into rhythm,” Djokovic said. “Maybe for some other guys it’s more natural, the movement, the ball striking, in a way finding the right tempo on the shots. For me, it just takes more than some other guys. That’s how it is, how it always was.”

Not only was Tuesday’s second-round match a challenge with the adjustment to clay, but Djokovic also encountered an opponent he hadn’t played before. The lefty Gakhov, who is World No. 198, left a strong impression on the 22-time major champion.

“I’m glad to start a clay season with a win against [an] opponent I didn’t know much about prior to today,” Djokovic said. “I actually watched a little bit of his video from the first-round win he had yesterday. That’s it.

“I knew he was a left-handed player, and I haven’t actually practised with left-handed players for a few weeks. So it took some adjustment to return the serve and to deal with the heavy topspin from his forehand. Very good player. I heard he has been training and living in Spain for quite a long time, so I can see why he’s been successful on clay.”

Pursuing a record-extending 39th ATP Masters 1000 crown this week, Djokovic will next meet Lorenzo Musetti or Luca Nardi.

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Fritz/Rune Upset Mektic/Pavic To Continue Monte-Carlo Run

  • Posted: Apr 11, 2023

Fritz/Rune Upset Mektic/Pavic To Continue Monte-Carlo Run

Sixth seeds Glasspool/Heliovaara also advance

After squaring off on the singles court two weeks ago in Miami, Taylor Fritz and Holger Rune are thriving as first-time partners this week at the Rolex Monte-Carlo Masters.

The American-Danish duo defeated fourth seeds Nikola Mektic and Mate Pavic 6-3, 6-4 on Tuesday in Monaco to advance to the quarter-finals at the ATP Masters 1000 event, backing up their opening win against Italians Simone Bolelli and Lorenzo Musetti on Monday.

Fritz and Rune were dominant on first serve against the Wimbledon finalists from Croatia, winning 87 per cent of points behind their first delivery and saving three of five break points against them. They converted on four of their seven break chances on return to maintain their perfect record as a team, without a set lost in their two matches.


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All four Tuesday doubles matches were decided in straight sets in the Principality, with the French-German team of Fabrice Martin and Andreas Mies also advancing to the quarter-finals with a 6-4, 6-4 win against Diego Schwartzman and Jannik Sinner.

In opening-round action, sixth seeds Lloyd Glasspool and Harri Heliovaara avoided the fate of fellow favourites Mektic/Pavic with a 6-3, 6-4 win against Nicolas Mahut and Stan Wawrinka, and Argentines Andres Molteni and Maximo Gonzalez beat Maxime Cressy and Matwe Middelkoop 6-3, 7-6(2).

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