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SF Preview: Alcaraz & Sinner Continue Growing Rivalry In Miami

  • Posted: Mar 31, 2023

SF Preview: Alcaraz & Sinner Continue Growing Rivalry In Miami

Alcaraz chasing historic ‘Sunshine Double’

For the second time this month, Carlos Alcaraz and Jannik Sinner will face off in the semi-finals at an ATP Masters 1000 event when they meet on Friday at the Miami Open presented by Itau. (Watch the semi-final from 7pm ET/1am CET)

At the BNP Paribas Open, the 19-year-old Alcaraz overcame the 21-year-old Sinner in straight sets, before he defeated Daniil Medvedev in the final to triumph in Indian Wells and rise to No. 1 in the Pepperstone ATP Rankings. Fast forward two weeks and Sinner will be eager for revenge in the latest chapter of their growing rivalry.

Aiming to become the youngest player to win the ‘Sunshine Double’, the defending champion Alcaraz has continued to bring the heat in Miami. The top seed has blitzed through the field at the hard-court event, not dropping a set en route to his fourth semi-final of the season. After defeating Facundo Bagnis and Dusan Lajovic in his first two matches, Alcaraz crushed seeds Tommy Paul and Taylor Fritz to set a blockbuster semi-final against Sinner.

“I’ve played against him in the final rounds of tournaments. That means he is playing a great level,” said Alcaraz, who will have 24 hours less recovery time than the Italian due to rain disrupting the Miami quarter-final schedule. “I am sure that we are going to play for big things in the future. I can’t wait to see our [improvement].”

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Rivalries: Alcaraz vs Sinner

Friday’s clash in Miami will be the sixth meeting between the former Next Gen ATP Finals champions. Alcaraz leads Sinner 3-2 in their ATP Head2Head series and has won their past two meetings on hard courts. At the 2022 US Open, the Spaniard won one of the matches of the season when he saved a match point in an epic five-set five-hour, 15-minute quarter-final victory which finished at 2:50 a.m. Alcaraz then defeated Sinner 7-6(4), 6-3 in Indian Wells earlier this month. The Spaniard went on to win both titles and will hope history repeats itself this weekend.

Sinner is aiming to break new ground in Miami, where he chases his first ATP Masters 1000 crown. The seven-time tour-level champion holds an impressive 12-2 record at the hard-court event, having advanced to the final on debut in 2021 and the quarter-finals in 2022. Like Alcaraz, Sinner has crushed everyone in his path this fortnight, not dropping more than four games in a set. The Italian is up two spots to No. 9 in the Peppestone ATP Live Rankings and will rise to No. 6 if he captures the crown.

The 10th seed, who has defeated seeds Grigor Dimitrov and Andrey Rublev in South Florida, is once again relishing the opportunity to face friend and foe Alcaraz.

“I [am] happy to play against him again because I look forward to these kind of matches,” Sinner said when looking ahead to the clash. “I feel like he makes me a better player. Here the court is fast. I think we both feel good here on these courts.”

If their previous encounters are to go by, fans can expect a heavyweight clash between two of the best movers and cleanest ballstrikers on Tour. Both men bludgeon the ball with unrelenting force and will look to demonstrate their incredible speed and athleticism to repel each other’s attacks.

Alcaraz, who will look to use the drop shot to outmanoeuvre Sinner, believes the key to their rivalry is the respect they have for each other off court.

“We have a good relationship outside the court. We wave [at] each other, we talk. When we are out of the court, we practise a few times together as well,” said Alcaraz. “He’s a really nice guy. I think that’s really important, as well, to be a nice person. We share a lot of great moments outside of the court.”

Alcaraz needs to win his fourth ATP Masters 1000 title this weekend to remain at No. 1 in the Pepperstone ATP Rankings. His quest continues against Sinner not before 7 p.m. local time (1 a.m. CET) on Miami stadium court.

View Alcaraz and Sinner’s full ATP H2H series.

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ATP & WTA Statement On Russian & Belarusian Players Returning To LTA Events & Wimbledon

  • Posted: Mar 31, 2023

ATP & WTA Statement On Russian & Belarusian Players Returning To LTA Events & Wimbledon

Statement in response to announcement made Friday

We are pleased that all players will have an opportunity to compete at Wimbledon and LTA events this summer. It has taken a collaborative effort across the sport to arrive at a workable solution which protects the fairness of the game. This remains an extremely difficult situation and we would like to thank Wimbledon and the LTA for their efforts in reaching this outcome, while reiterating our unequivocal condemnation of Russia’s war on Ukraine.

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The 'Sweet Problem' Khachanov Has In Miami

  • Posted: Mar 31, 2023

The ‘Sweet Problem’ Khachanov Has In Miami

Khachanov to play Medvedev for place in championship match

Daniil Medvedev joked about being a hard-court specialist at the BNP Paribas Open. His next opponent, longtime friend Karen Khachanov, has proven a tough foe at the biggest hard-court tournaments in the world over the past six months.

“When you go deep in this tournament, you don’t have big time to prepare on clay unfortunately,” Khachanov said in response to a question about his clay-court preparation. “But it’s at the same time fortunate because you are playing well here, so it’s like a sweet problem to have, I would say.”


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Khachanov has now made the semi-finals at three of the biggest tournaments in the world over the past six months: last year’s US Open, this year’s Australian Open and now the Miami Open presented by Itau.

The 14th seed lost a set in his opening match of the tournament against Argentine Tomas Martin Etcheverry, but he has not looked back. The 26-year-old has not dropped a set since, including wins against Australian Open quarter-finalist Jiri Lehecka, second seed Stefanos Tsitsipas and 2022 Miami semi-finalist Francisco Cerundolo.

“The confidence and self-belief and all these things, they appear stronger,” Khachanov said. “Now I’m happy that I can show that level constantly and more consistently.”

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All four of Khachanov’s ATP Masters 1000 semi-finals, including this run in Miami, have come on hard courts. His lone title at the level came at the 2018 Rolex Paris Masters.

If Khachanov manages to claim his second crown at this level, it will also mark his first title of any kind since that triumph. Already up to No. 11 in the Pepperstone ATP Live Rankings, Khachanov will ascend to a career-high World No. 6 if he lifts the trophy.

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Gonzalez/Roger-Vasselin, Krajicek/Mahut Reach Miami Final Via Match Tie-Breaks

  • Posted: Mar 31, 2023

Gonzalez/Roger-Vasselin, Krajicek/Mahut Reach Miami Final Via Match Tie-Breaks

Men’s doubles final set for Saturday

Both doubles semi-finals went the distance on Thursday at the Miami Open presented by Itau, with a pair of Match Tie-breaks deciding the finalists at the ATP Masters 1000 event. Santiago Gonzalez and Edouard Roger-Vasselin will face Austin Krajicek and Nicolas Mahut in Saturday’s title match after both teams won their second Match Tie-break in as many matches to advance to the trophy round.

Gonzalez/Roger-Vasselin edged Americans Nathaniel Lammons and Jackson Withrow 6-4, 5-7, 12-10 to back up their quarter-final upset of top seeds Wesley Koolhof and Neal Skupski. The unseeded Mexican-French pair also knocked off seventh seeds Marcel Granollers and Horacio Zeballos in the opening round.

A single break of serve decided both sets before Gonzalez/Roger-Vasselin clinched victory on their third match point of the Match Tie-break.


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Krajicek/Mahut were 5-7, 7-5, 10-8 winners against Kevin Krawietz and Fabrice Martin thanks to their third Match Tie-break win of the tournament, the first of which came against third seeds Nikola Mektic and Mate Pavic in the first round.

Trailing 6/8 in the decider, the American-French duo won the final four points of the match to book a place in Saturday’s final. Krajicek/Mahut will be seeking their first title as a pair while Gonzalez/Roger-Vasselin bid for their second title of 2023, having previously triumphed in Marseille.

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Rivalries: Alcaraz vs Sinner

  • Posted: Mar 31, 2023

Rivalries: Alcaraz vs Sinner

Pair will meet on Friday in Miami

Carlos Alcaraz and Jannik Sinner have quickly formed one of the most exciting rivalries on the ATP Tour.

Possessing thunderous groundstrokes and incredible agility, the 19-year-old Spaniard and 21-year-old Italian have already clashed on the biggest stages and are poised to do so plenty in the next decade.

With Alcaraz leading Sinner 3-2 in their ATP Head2Head series, they will meet again on Friday in the semi-finals at the Miami Open presented by Itau.

“I [am] happy to play against him again because I look forward to these kind of matches,” Sinner said when looking ahead to the clash. “I feel like he makes me a better player. Here the court is fast. I think we both feel good here on these courts.”

Ahead of their sixth encounter, ATPTour.com looks at three of their past blockbusters.


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Wimbledon 2022, Fourth Round, Sinner d. Alcaraz 6-1, 6-4, 6-7(8), 6-3
Just hours after Wimbledon looked back to celebrate the 100th anniversary of Centre Court, Sinner and Alcaraz provided a glimpse of the future with their first Grand Slam meeting in the fourth round.

In the first Centre Court match for both, Sinner overwhelmed Alcaraz with his pure ball-striking and had two match points to wrap up a straight-sets win before Alcaraz found his rhythm to take the third-set tie-break. After converting on his fourth set point, the Spaniard raised his racquet, soaking in the crowd’s roar.

As the match grew more physical, Sinner stemmed the tide with two battling holds to open the fourth set, then scored the decisive break to edge ever closer to his third major quarter-final. After missing out on three further match points on return at 5-3, Sinner saved a break point as he served out one of the most entertaining matches of the fortnight. A forehand winner — Sinner’s 35th of the match — completed the victory after three hours and 35 minutes.

“Carlos is a very tough opponent and a very nice person, so it is always a huge pleasure for me to play against him,” said Sinner, who would fall to Novak Djokovic in five sets in the quarter-finals.

<a href='https://www.atptour.com/en/players/jannik-sinner/s0ag/overview'>Jannik Sinner</a>
Photo Credit: Adrian Dennis/Getty Images

US Open 2022, QF, Alcaraz d. Sinner 6-3, 6-7(7), 6-7(0), 7-5, 6-3
In one of the matches of the 2022 season, Alcaraz and Sinner battled late into the New York night. Across five hours and 15 minutes of twists and turns, the only constant was elite tennis and tireless effort from both men. Alcaraz and Sinner took turns lighting up Arthur Ashe Stadium, flashing their tremendous athleticism and power in equal measures.

Sinner dominated the third-set tie-break to take a two-sets-to-one lead and carried his momentum into the fourth set as he scored an instant break. But the fearless Alcaraz erased a match point with Sinner serving at 5-4 and went on a run of four straight games to force a fifth set. Again trailing by a break, the Spaniard repeated that feat by winning four games in a row in the fifth set to claim victory at 2:50 a.m.

“Honestly, I still don’t know how I did it,” Alcaraz said. “You have to believe in yourself. I believed in my game. It was really difficult to close out the match. I tried to stay calm, but it is difficult in the moment.

“The energy I received in this court at 3 a.m., it was unbelievable. Probably in other tournaments, everybody [would go] to their house to rest. But they [stayed] in the court, supporting me. It was unbelievable.”

Alcaraz went on to claim his first Grand Slam title at Flushing Meadows and by doing so he became the youngest World No. 1 in the history of the Pepperstone ATP Rankings.

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Alcaraz Saves MP, Outlasts Sinner In Historic US Open QF Thriller

BNP Paribas Open 2023, SF, Alcaraz d. Sinner 7-6(4), 6-3
Carlos Alcaraz captured his third ATP Masters 1000 crown at the BNP Paribas Open earlier this month, returning to No. 1 in the Pepperstone ATP Rankings following his triumph. The Spaniard did not drop a set en route to the title, but was pushed the hardest by Sinner in the pair’s semi-final clash in Indian Wells.

In another entertaining battle, the bulk of the drama came in a back-and-forth opening set as Sinner took full advantage of a dip in level from his opponent to turn a 2-4 deficit into a 5-4 lead, winning 11 straight points in the process. Sinner kept the pressure on to create a set point at 6-5, but a uniquely Alcaraz combination — big serve, drop shot, volley winner — erased the chance and ensured the set would be decided in a tie-break.

Encouraged by his escape, the Spaniard powered through the tie-break and carried his momentum into set two, when he consolidated an early break with a point-of-the-season contender, planting a topspin lob on the baseline after a Sinner dipper forced him to retreat from the net. He later wriggled out of 0/30 to hold for 5-2, and served out the match with ease behind a pair of punishing forehand winners.

“I’m really happy to get through this great match. Jannik obviously is a really great player with great shots,” Alcaraz said. “I would say we’re going to have a great rivalry over the years. We are playing in the best tournaments in the world. It’s not over here. We are going to play a lot of great matches.”

View their ATP H2H series here.

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Alcaraz Outclasses Fritz To Return To Miami SFs

  • Posted: Mar 31, 2023

Alcaraz Outclasses Fritz To Return To Miami SFs

Spaniard must defend title to retain World No. 1

Facing a high-level performance from home favourite Taylor Fritz at the Miami Open presented by Itau, Carlos Alcaraz proved once again that he is all but untouchable at his best. In a Thursday night quarter-final, the World No. 1 kept the American at arm’s length in an efficient 6-4, 6-2 victory to continue his quest for the Sunshine Double — a rare title sweep across Indian Wells and Miami.

“A little bit of nerves at the beginning of the match. It was new for me, playing against him,” Alcaraz said of his first meeting with Fritz. “I knew that I had to play my game, the way that I was playing the previous matches, a high level for me. Of course I’m very happy with the way I started the match, with no mistakes and with a lot of power. It was a key for me to break his serve at the beginning and then [play] my game.”

Needing to retain his Miami crown to remain atop the Pepperstone ATP Rankings, Alcaraz did his damage early in both sets, taking control with an instant break of serve in each. Fritz fought back well in the opener and was arguably the better player after the first game, but Alcaraz erased two break points — both in supreme style with half-volleys — to cling to his lead.

With both men eager to attack, Alcaraz again landed the first blow in set two. This time, he was more assured in closing out the set, rattling off the final three games to secure the win in one hour, 18 minutes. Both men finished with 20 winners, but Alcaraz kept his unforced error count down to 13 while Fritz committed 28 miscues. The Spaniard won three of his five break points, converting in each game in which he created a break opportunity.

Both Alcaraz and Fritz entered Thursday with 2-0 season records against Top 10 opponents. With the victory, his 10th in a row, Alcaraz improved to 18-1 overall in 2023. He is now two wins from becoming the first man since Roger Federer in 2017 to claim the trophies at Indian Wells and Miami in succession.

The Spaniard’s quest for history will continue with a Friday semi-final showdown with Jannik Sinner, a rematch of their Indian Wells meeting at the same stage. The Italian will have an extra day of rest entering their sixth ATP Head2Head meeting, with his Wednesday win against Emil Ruusuvuori beating the rain that postponed the Alcaraz-Fritz matchup to Thursday.

“I’ve played against him in the final rounds of tournaments. That means he is playing a great level,” said Alcaraz, who holds a 3-2 lead in their budding rivalry. “Of course I am sure that we are going to play for big things in the future. I can’t wait to see our [improvement].”

For Fritz, the defeat puts him in jeopardy of falling out of the Top 10 one month after he reached a career-high Pepperstone ATP Ranking of No. 5. If Karen Khachanov defeats Daniil Medvedev in Friday’s semis, he will move ahead of the American at World No. 10. A titlist in Delray Beach and a quarter-finalist in Indian Wells, Fritz holds a 13-3 record on home soil this season.

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Two Friends, One Finalist: Medvedev, Khachanov Square Off In Miami SFs

  • Posted: Mar 31, 2023

Two Friends, One Finalist: Medvedev, Khachanov Square Off In Miami SFs

Medvedev seeks fifth straight ATP Tour final

A familiar foursome makes up the semi-final lineup at the Miami Open presented by Itau. Three repeat semi-finalists from Indian Wells — Daniil Medvedev, Carlos Alcaraz and Jannik Sinner — are joined by Karen Khachanov, who reached that stage at each of the past two majors.

The first of Friday’s two matchups will see good friends Medvedev and Khachanov become foes, with the fourth-seeded Medvedev seeking a fifth straight ATP Tour final.

After seeing a 19-match and three-tournament winning streak snapped by Alcaraz in the Indian Wells final, Medvedev said it was time to start a new streak. He’s emphatically done that in Miami, where he has not lost a set in three victories, in addition to a third-round walkover.

“[I’m] in confidence now. I’m playing well, starting from Rotterdam,” said Medvedev, who also won titles in Doha and Dubai on his flawless run. “I managed to bring this [level] here, because it was not that easy,” he added, referring to the transition from slower conditions in Indian Wells to the faster surface in Miami, as well as the three-day gap between his first and second matches due to the walkover.

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Medvedev: ‘I Actually Hate To Lose More Than I Like To Win’

After ending the dream run of Christopher Eubanks in Thursday’s quarter-finals, Medvedev faces his toughest test of the tournament in Khachanov. The opponents grew up together, rising through the junior and professional ranks at the same time. But neither was a heralded junior until Khachanov began to break through with some big wins around age 15 or 16, as Medvedev recalled.

“We had a good rise together to the ATP Tour,” he said. “We already achieved a lot. It’s great. We still spend time together. We are great friends, and I feel like we respect each other a lot.”

Khachanov, who will turn 27 in May to match Medvedev’s age, brings a seven-set winning streak into the semi-finals, with straight-sets wins against Jiri Lehecka, Stefanos Tsitsipas and Francisco Cerundolo in his past three matches. He also comes into Friday’s matchup with a wealth of recent big-stage experience, having reached the last four at the US Open and the Australian Open.

“Since last year, US Open semi-finals, I think this was kind of a bigger change and bigger step forward, which gave me the current results which I have right now,” he said of the recent improvement in his game. “I would say the confidence and self-belief and all these things, they appear stronger. Now I’m happy that I can show that level constantly and more consistently.”

Nearly four years since he reached a career-high Pepperstone ATP Ranking of No. 8 in July 2019, Khachanov is one win away from breaking back into the Top 10. He has moved up five places to No. 11 in the Pepperstone ATP Live Rankings behind his Miami run, and would move ahead of Taylor Fritz by reaching his second ATP Masters 1000 final. If he can repeat his title run from the 2018 Rolex Paris Masters and pick up his fifth tour-level trophy on Sunday, Khachanov would rise to a new high of No. 6.

To keep that dream alive, he must earn his first win against Medvedev since 2018. Medvedev leads their ATP Head2Head 3-1, beginning with a victory in the 2017 Next Gen ATP Finals. Their Miami meeting will be their second in an ATP Masters 1000 semi-final, with Medvedev claiming the spoils at that stage in 2019 in Montreal. Medvedev also won their most recent matchup earlier this season in Adelaide.

“We are good friends outside, but we are rivals on the court,” Khachanov said. “Tomorrow is another match, which I’m very excited to play against him, semi-finals.

“At the end of the day, both of us, we understand why we are here,” he added with a smile. “We practise together. Even in the practices we compete, and we play almost at 100 per cent… We just put friendship aside for a couple of hours and we will be rivals on the court.”

The rivalry will renew at 1 p.m. local time (7 p.m. CET) on Friday as the friends turned foes open play on the Miami stadium court.

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Medvedev: 'I Actually Hate To Lose More Than I Like To Win'

  • Posted: Mar 31, 2023

Medvedev: ‘I Actually Hate To Lose More Than I Like To Win’

Fourth seed seeking fifth straight ATP Tour final

Hard work beats talent when talent doesn’t work hard. 

While Daniil Medvedev did not exactly deliver that coaching cliche in his Thursday press conference at the Miami Open presented by Itau, he did explain the importance of both factors in his success — and the forces that drive him to push himself in training.

Discussing his mental strength, Medvedev explained the focus he puts on that aspect of his game, stemming from his hatred of losing.

“You never know what’s more important, talent or hard work. Actually both are,” he said. “Starting from when I was really young, no matter which game I play, I hate to lose. So I actually hate to lose more than I like to win, and you can kind of see this on the court. I think that’s a good thing.

“But if you don’t work [at] it, that can become a bad thing, because that’s when you can sometimes maybe stop practising hard, because that’s going to release some pressure off you. If you don’t practise hard, you say, ‘Yeah, well, I lost the match because I didn’t practise well enough.’ That’s a little bit weak.”


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The Miami fourth seed also credited his work with mental coaches, though he did not employ one last season during a down year by his standards. He is once again working with a mental coach this season.

“That’s something I want to improve,” he said. “For example, talking about Indian Wells, I had my tantrums, which it’s not good. It can throw you out from the concentration, and it’s not a good look anyway, but I managed to still win matches and still be concentrated during those matches.”

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Medvedev Ends Eubanks’ Miami Run

Medvedev has been rock solid in both his game and his mentality this tournament, winning all six sets he’s played in reaching the Miami semis for the first time. After a 6-3, 7-5 win against qualifier and home favourite Christopher Eubanks on Thursday, he will need to be even sharper when he takes on good friend and 14th seed Karen Khachanov in Friday’s semis.

The opponents grew up together and rose through the junior and professional ranks at similar times. They will contest their fifth ATP Head2Head meeting in Miami, with Medvedev holding a 3-1 advantage.

“I think maybe just a little bit you have to kind of force yourself even more to be focused, and when I say this, it’s just because they know your game so well and you know theirs so well,” Medvedev said of the matchup. “I’m almost sure we know how the match is going to go tomorrow, and it’s a question of who’s going to make the best shot out of [the shots] we’re going to play.”

The semi-final will open Friday’s play on the Miami stadium court at 1 p.m. local time.

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Khachanov Dispatches Cerundolo, Sets Medvedev SF

  • Posted: Mar 30, 2023

Khachanov Dispatches Cerundolo, Sets Medvedev SF

26-year-old up to No. 11 in Pepperstone ATP Live Rankings

Karen Khachanov advanced to the semi-finals at an ATP Masters 1000 event for the first time since 2019 Thursday when he moved past Argentine Francisco Cerundolo 6-3, 6-2 at the Miami Open presented by Itau.

After falling a break down in the first set, the 26-year-old quickly recovered to ensure it was one-way traffic from then. The big-hitting 14th seed crushed 18 winners and drove the ball through the quick court to force Cerundolo into errors, sealing his victory after 75 minutes.

“At the end of the day it was a question of finding rhythm,” Khachanov said. “At the beginning, it was pretty windy and I couldn’t figure out where the wind was coming through. I then started to hit through the ball more and then I felt better and better. After I broke him back I felt I am on a good rise and felt that I could not miss. That is a good feeling to have during a match.

“I think I have improved my mentality and self belief a lot. I am enjoying the process. I think the results speak for themselves and I am happy it is paying off.”


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Cerundolo entered the match holding an 8-1 record in Miami, having soared to the semi-finals on debut last year. The 24-year-old was unable to earn his first victory against Khachanov and reach the last four again, however, committing 22 unforced errors.

Khachanov won his only ATP Masters 1000 title in Paris in 2018, before he advanced to the semi-finals in Toronto in 2019. He will continue the quest for his fifth tour-level title and first since Paris five years ago when he plays Daniil Medvedev in the semi-finals.

“We grew up together and everytime I play against Daniil or Andrey [Rublev], it is not easy because we are good friends,” Khachanov said looking ahead to his match against Medvedev. “But on the court we are rivals. We played in Adelaide this year and he beat me pretty solid, so I will try to approach this match differently.”

Khachanov is up five spots to No. 11 in the Pepperstone ATP Live Rankings and will jump back into the Top 10 if he wins the title. Earlier this season, he advanced to the semi-finals at the Australian Open.

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