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Nadal set for Jeddah return, to appear at the Next Gen ATP Finals presented by PIF

  • Posted: Dec 11, 2025

Rafael Nadal will return to Jeddah for the Next Gen ATP Finals presented by PIF, which runs from 17-21 December. The Spanish superstar, an ambassador for the Saudi Tennis Federation, will participate in several events during the tournament, aiming to inspire the younger generation, both globally and locally.

Among the highlights on this year’s agenda, the former No. 1 in the PIF ATP Rankings will take part in a meet and greet at the King Abdullah Sports City’s fan zone on 19 December.

“Coming back to Jeddah for the Next Gen ATP Finals is something I am looking forward to,” Nadal said in a press release. “I’ve been given the warmest of welcomes in Saudi Arabia and I feel there is a real energy for tennis.

“As I have been saying, it’s my goal to help inspire the next generation, in Saudi Arabia and around the world. Working together with the STF [Saudi Tennis Federation] to develop the huge potential of tennis in the Kingdom that has already made impressive progress is one key element. The reason for me to come back is to see the development at all levels and to help towards that goal. I’m very proud to help more kids pick up a racquet, compete, or simply discover something new that they love.”

Last year in Jeddah, Nadal held a meet and greet, attended a prize giving ceremony at an U14 STF tournament, and also ran a clay-court coaching clinic for young Saudi tennis hopefuls at The Racquet Space. Nadal visited the Onyx Arena to meet the competitors taking part in the first wheelchair tennis event held in Saudi Arabia and also met with Team Saudi’s Davis Cup players.

Nadal also held a roundtable talk with ATP Tour stars Jakub Mensik, Alex Michelsen and Joao Fonseca, the Brazilian who went on to win the 20-and-under event.

The Jeddah field this year will feature last year’s finalist Learner Tien, Alexander Blockx, Dino Prizmic, Martin Landaluce, Nicolai Budkov Kjaer, Nishesh Basavareddy, Rafael Jodar and Justin Engel.

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Shelton launches YouTube channel, offering behind-the-scenes footage

  • Posted: Dec 11, 2025

Ben Shelton is one of the ATP Tour’s most entertaining and magnetic figures. Whether it’s his blistering serve, infectious energy or his bright personality, the American has a way of connecting with fans. Now, the 23-year-old is inviting fans an even closer look at his life.

On Wednesday, Shelton launched his own YouTube Channel and released an 11-minute episode titled, ‘The Long Game’, which provides behind-the-scenes footage of the lefty at the US Open and his debut appearance at the Nitto ATP Finals.

“I’m really excited to show you guys the behind the scenes of my life, on the court, off the court, unedited, unfiltered,” Shelton said in an intro video posted on his channel.

Shelton, No. 9 in the PIF ATP Rankings, won his biggest career title in August at the ATP Masters 1000 event in Toronto. He finished the season with a 40-24 match record, according to the Infosys ATP Win/Loss Index.

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A post shared by Ben Shelton (@benshelton)

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McDonald tops 2025 Carbon Tracker leaderboard; winners donate $100,000 to charity

  • Posted: Dec 11, 2025

More than 300 players have taken part in the first three seasons of Carbon Tracker, the award-winning app that helps players track their tournament travel, understand their emissions and make more sustainable choices on Tour.

Mackenzie McDonald topped this year’s leaderboard, followed by Tom Hands, Yanaki Milev, Ryan Peniston and Valentin Royer. Across the season, players tracked a combined 2.3 million kilometres of travel and offset 585 tonnes of carbon.

The top five will direct a $100,000 prize pool to the charities of their choosing. McDonald, two-time Carbon Tracker winner (also in 2023), will donate his share to the USTA Foundation’s Mackie McDonald College Fund. Launched this year, the Mackie McDonald College Fund is an initiative that will provide college scholarships to students in under-resourced communities who demonstrate academic excellence, leadership, sportsmanship and passion for the sport of tennis, as well as support pathway programmes for younger youth, especially in the San Francisco Bay Area.

Additional charities supported this season include X.

Mackenzie McDonald, ATP Player, said: “It’s great to win Carbon Tracker for the second time. The initiative has helped me understand the impact of travelling between tournaments, allowed me to practically make more responsible choices, and shown me that even small changes add up. This donation from the ATP will be used to support the programmes and initiatives of my fund through the USTA Foundation, which helps open doors of opportunity for young people through the power of tennis, education and mentorship.”

Eno Polo, ATP CEO, said: “As a global sport with over 300 tournaments across the ATP and ATP Challenger Tour, travel is our number one environmental challenge. Carbon Tracker puts real numbers behind our impact, helping us take the steps we need to tackle it. Thank you to every player who took part, particularly to Mackenzie McDonald for leading the way this season.”

Carbon Tracker 2025 Breakdown

How Carbon Tracker Works

Track: Players log their travel to tournaments to calculate and understand their carbon emissions.

Offset: Players can mitigate their emissions by purchasing carbon credits through Gold Standard, supporting accredited climate and sustainable development projects. One credit represents the removal or reduction of one tonne of CO2 equivalent from the atmosphere.

Compete: Leaderboard points are awarded for a range of in-app activities including number of tournaments offset, tonnes of CO2 offset, and participation in sustainability quizzes, with double points awarded on key environmental days during the year.

Carbon Tracker’s long-term goal is to encourage more sustainable travel choices on Tour. Its dashboard gives players a clear breakdown of their footprint and the impact of different travel options. Aggregated data also helps the ATP to monitor key Tour-wide trends season to season. Carbon Tracker begins its fourth season in January 2026.

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#NextGenATP talents Fonseca, Mensik, Tien headline first-time ATP Tour winners in 2025

  • Posted: Dec 11, 2025

To mark the end of another thrilling season, ATPTour.com is unveiling our annual ‘Best Of’ series, which will reflect on the most intriguing rivalries, matches, comebacks, upsets and more. Today we highlight those who joined the winner’s circle for the first time.

The 2025 ATP Tour ushered in a fresh cast of first-time champions, nine players who carved their names onto the winners’ roll and into the season’s defining narrative. It was a year marked by unexpected breakthroughs, dramatic runs, and stories that captured the imagination of fans around the world.

[ATP APP]

Alexandre Muller, Hong Kong
The Frenchman opened the new season with a nerve-jangling surge to the Bank of China Hong Kong Tennis Open crown. After beating Kei Nishikori in the final, Alexandre Muller became just the third player in the Open Era to win a tour-level title having lost the opening set in every match he played (after Arthur Ashe at the 1975 WCT Finals and Alexander Bublik in Montpellier in 2024).

“I was a little tired on the courts but I think the key was to stay calm and keep the energy for myself,” Muller said. “I stayed calm, focused on my game and tried to adapt.”

Joao Fonseca, Buenos Aires
After his triumph at last year’s Next Gen ATP Finals presented by PIF in Jeddah, Joao Fonseca arrived in 2025 surrounded by expectation, and he instantly delivered. The 18-year-old produced a dazzling run at the IEB+ Argentina Open — including against Mariano Navone in the quarter-finals, where he saved two match points — to become the youngest South American champion in the ATP Tour era (since 1990).

“Unbelievable week, even in Argentina there are some Brazilians cheering for me,” an emotional Fonseca said. “That’s just amazing. Every Brazilian, everyone from their country wants this support from your own country. For me, this [moment] that I’m living is just unbelievable.”

Tomas Machac, Acapulco
Tomas Machac arrived at the Abierto Mexicano Telcel presentado por HSBC in Acapulco as the highest-ranked player yet to win a title, but he left with an ATP 500 trophy in his hands. His championship-match victory placed him alongside former Top 10 stars Tomas Berdych and Radek Stepanek as the only Czech players to win a title at that level.

“It means a lot. It is something I never dreamed could happen, especially at an ATP 500, so it feels amazing for me,” said Machac, who rose five spots to No. 20 with his triumph. “I was working very hard in the past year, so I am happy I can achieve something that shows me I am going the right way.”

Jakub Mensik, Miami
Facing Novak Djokovic in an ATP Masters 1000 final would intimate almost anyone. But not Jakub Mensik, who delivered the performance of his career at the Miami Open presented by Itau, where the 19-year-old downed his idol in straight sets to become just the fourth man to win his first ATP Tour title at that level.

“It was not the first time I’ve played against Novak,” said Mensik, who lost his first Lexus ATP Head2Head meeting Djokovic last year in the Shanghai quarter-finals. “There is no harder task in tennis than to beat him in the finals. But of course I felt really great and it’s my time, so I just tried to focus on the match like I did before in previous rounds.”

Flavio Cobolli, Bucharest
Flavio Cobolli flipped his 2025 season on its head in spectacular fashion at the Tiriac Open presented by UniCredit Bank. The Italian arrived in Bucharest riding an eight-match tour-level losing streak, but he tore through the field — including top seed Sebastian Baez in the final — to join the ATP Tour winner’s circle.

“It’s a big dream come true for my career,” said Cobolli. “I always dreamed of winning an ATP tournament and it happened today. I came from a tough moment. I had not won a match before this tournament, this year, and I won the tournament. So I’m really happy about it.”

Jenson Brooksby, Houston
If drama defined Muller’s run in Hong Kong, Jenson Brooksby’s week at the Fayez Sarofim & Co. U.S. Men’s Clay Court Championship in Houston was downright cinematic. The 24-year-old American saved match points in three of his matches en route to his maiden title. He survived one in his first-round qualifying match, two against third seed Alejandro Tabilo in the main-draw second round, and one against top seed Tommy Paul in the semi-finals, before defeating 2023 Houston champ Frances Tiafoe 6-4, 6-2 in the final. Brooksby began the season as an unranked player but in Houston, where he was competing as the World No. 507, he became the third-lowest ranked champion in ATP Tour history (since 1990).

“It means the world. It was one of my biggest goals ever since I’ve been a professional tennis player,” said Brooksby, who entered the ATP 250 as a qualifying wild card. “It just means a lot to have my first one. It really does. It’s probably the best week of my life.”

Gabriel Diallo, ‘s-Hertogenbosch
At the Libema Open, Gabriel Diallo showcased his natural feel for grass, launching 56 aces on his way to the title at the ATP 250 in ‘s-Hertogenbosch. He edged close friend Zizou Bergs 7-5, 7-6(8) in a tense final before collapsing in delighted disbelief.

“Oh man, I don’t have the words. It’s something that you dream of for your whole life since you were a little kid, to get an ATP Tour title,” said Diallo, who lost his first tour-level final in Almaty in 2024. “The fact that I was able to do it here after losing a final last year, it just means the world to me. I’m very happy, not only for myself but for my whole team.”

Valentin Vacherot, Shanghai
Valentin Vacherot produced one of the season’s most astonishing runs at the Rolex Shanghai Masters. As the No. 204 player in the PIF ATP Rankings, he became the lowest-ranked ATP Masters 1000 champion, defeating the likes of Holger Rune and Djokovic before his cousin and former Texas A&M teammate Arthur Rinderknech in a family-driven final.

“It is unreal what just happened. I have no idea what is happening right now. I am not even dreaming, it is just crazy,” Vacherot said after the final. “I am just so happy with my performances the past two weeks. There has to be one loser but I think there are two winners today, one family that won. And I think for the sport of tennis, the story is unreal.”

Learner Tien, Metz
In the closing week of the regular ATP Tour season, Learner Tien delivered a defining moment at the Moselle Open in Metz. The 19-year-old added a maiden tour-level trophy to a year in which he captured five Top-10 wins and reached an ATP 500 final in Beijing.

“I never take it for granted, just coming out here and competing. So, holding this trophy just means the world to me. And I’m just really grateful,” Tien said during the trophy ceremony.

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Cerundolo featured in GQ Mexico & Latinoamerica

  • Posted: Dec 10, 2025

Francisco Cerundolo was recently featured in GQ Mexico and Latinoamerica, highlighting the Argentine’s tennis journey, his life on the ATP Tour and off-court style.

The exclusive interview, a GQ Hype feature, explores Cerundolo’s sacrifices to reach the Top 20 of the PIF ATP Rankings and the 27-year-old’s mindset as Argentine’s No. 1. The feature also spotlights a sleek, fashion-forward photoshoot.

Cerundolo, No. 21 in the PIF ATP Rankings, finished the 2025 season with a 38-25 match record, according to the Infosys ATP Win/Loss Index. His best result was a run to the final at his home tournament, the ATP 250 in Buenos Aires.

Francisco Cerundolo.
Francisco Cerundolo. Photo Credit: Lucas Ricci

Credits:
Interview: Raul Vilchis (@elvilchisolalde)
Photography: Lucas Ricci (@_lucasricci_)
Stylist & Creative Director: Gaston Olmos (@gastonhttp)
Makeup: Guadalupe Cecile by Veronica Moon por Chanel
Location: Buenos Aires Rowing Club (@buenosairesrowingclub)
Head of Editorial Content: Alejandro Ortiz (@yosoymatu)

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