Miami Open, FL 2026 - ATP Masters 1000

PhiEaglesfan712

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If I had to bet my life on it, I'm taking Nadal at 22 over Carlos at 22. Nadal went up against peak Federer. If you swap places, I don't think Carlos wins those Wimbledons and US Opens. Peak Federer was unstoppable at those tournaments, winning 5 in a row at each. Now, if you put 2005-09 Nadal in today's competition, he would dominate. Nadal would be a bad matchup for Sinner (look at the 2021 French Open, when Rafa was injured, and he still bageled Sinner).
 
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El Dude

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ElDude, you know I understand you appreciate Alcaraz but this statement in particular caught my attention:


You are technically right, but I dunno , he’s a 22 year old who’s won 7 slams already & has made 4 straight Slam finals, winning 3 of them. He’s accomplished more at the ripe old age of 22 ( youngest winning all 4 slams, youngest to win the channel double, youngest atp # 1 ye in the open era, winning 500 atp finals on grass, clay, outdoor HC & indoor HC, etc, etc, etc). that to preface him with “hasn’t yet shown” is amusing to me considering he’s accomplished more overall by the age of 22 than any other male player, bar none in the entire history of the ATP open era.

Djokovic, Nadal, Fereder, McEnroes, Connor, and yes, even Borg pale in comparison with what Alcaraz has done by age 22.

Thus my humrous retort…
That’s all.
Well if we stick with me being technically right and then add in that I recognize everything you say, we're basically in agreement. I can see how any kind of hesitation to limit the upside of Carlos, given what he's shown, could be seen as off-putting. And understand that right now, I'd rank him ahead of everyone but the Big Three, Sampras, Mac, Lendl, and Borg in an Open Era only greatness list. Unless aliens attack, he's going to put guys like Connors, Agassi, Becker, etc far in the rear view over the next few seasons. And really he just needs three or four healthy years to surpass everyone but the Big Three.

So we've got a guy who, by the time he turns 28, will probably have the resume to be the fourth best player of the Open Era. Not bad. Not bad at all.

But...as I think you know, that isn't what I was putting into question. I wasn't talking about career accomplishments, but specific seasons - and whether Carlos will ever put together a season not only better than 2025, but as good as the 5-10 best years of the Open Era. His best year so far is already about as good as the best years of Pete Sampras (1994, 1997) which I see as in the top 25ish seasons, but not the top 10. So my question is whether he can take what he did last year (top 20-25) and fill in the gaps to make it a top 10 season.

What separates Sampras' best years from the top 10 season? Well, basically Pete's weakness on clay. A player doesn't even need three Slams to reach the top 10; that helps, but really he needs to not have a major weak area, or prolonged dip in peak level. Pete's weakness on clay is pretty much what separates his peak from, say, Rafa's peak. Rafa, at his best, was great on every surface. Now Rafa's three best years are better than Pete's best, and his two best (2010, 2013) are both top 10 (but not top 5).

To have a top 10 season, basically a few things need to start with the following:
  • Win at least two Slams and be in at least three finals. Check.
  • Win at least thee other big titles. Check.
That's basically the baseline for a top 25 season. With only on or two exceptions, every top 25 season--by my accounting--fulfills those two criteria. But to get to a top 10 season, a player needs some of the following: win a third Slam, more big titles, a bunch of minor titles, go deep in more big tournaments, etc.

So really, to turn 2025 into a top 10 season, Carlos would need to add a third Slam and/or a couple more big titles. Both seem quite possible. And really, if he had won Wimbledon last year, his top 20-25 ranking would be in the top 15, at least. Winning Wimbledon and a fourth big title, would have probably got him into the top 10. Meaning, he's very close already and I don't see why in the next few years--possibly this year--he can't break into the top 10.

Even if he doesn't, he's still going to have an amazing career, with a good chance of surpassing all but the Big Three - and maybe higher. If he has five more seasons like 2025, and adds five more in the 2022-24 range, he's going to be in the conversation with the Big Three.
 

MargaretMcAleer

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Sinner d Tiafoe 62 62 in their QF match, a really clean set of tennis from Jannik
14 Aces in 8 service games, 34 W and 14UFE
30 consecutive sets won in Masters events, extending his record
Jannik's 4th SF in Miami, he will play the winner of Zverev v Cerundolo in the SF.
BTW,
Since the Miami Open's inauguration in 1985.Sinner is the first player to claim 14 consecutive men's singles wins at the Sunshine Double without conceding a set.
 
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MargaretMcAleer

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SFs
Friday 27th March,
Not before 3pm local time,
Lehecka (21) vs Fils (28) Fils leads their H2H 2-1

Not before 7pm local time,
Sinner (2) vs Zverev (3) Sinner leads their H2H 7-4
 

Murat B.

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Assuming there isn't anything specifically wrong with Fils, I do not understand how you cannot recover from Wednesday's match at the age of 21. I have seen mobsters with cement blocks on their feet at the bottom of the Hudson River move better than him.
Congrats Lehecka. He played like the adult on the court today.
 

MargaretMcAleer

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Lehecka d Fils 62 62
Jiri played a flawless match to reach the biggest final of his life
1st mens finalist through to the finals
 
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MargaretMcAleer

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Assuming there isn't anything specifically wrong with Fils, I do not understand how you cannot recover from Wednesday's match at the age of 21. I have seen mobsters with cement blocks on their feet at the bottom of the Hudson River move better than him.
Congrats Lehecka. He played like the adult on the court today.
It is a learning process for the 21 yo he did have a day off, played his previous match 'with grit and running on adrenaline' he has be able to manage his energy levels in a match so he has plenty in reserve for his next match, seeing he has come back to the tour after being out with lower back fractures for 8 months, a really good result getting to the SF of a Masters 1000
 
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El Dude

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If I had to bet my life on it, I'm taking Nadal at 22 over Carlos at 22. Nadal went up against peak Federer. If you swap places, I don't think Carlos wins those Wimbledons and US Opens. Peak Federer was unstoppable at those tournaments, winning 5 in a row at each. Now, if you put 2005-09 Nadal in today's competition, he would dominate. Nadal would be a bad matchup for Sinner (look at the 2021 French Open, when Rafa was injured, and he still bageled Sinner).
That's a tough one. Carlos in 2026 equates with Rafa in 2009. Rafa entered his peak in 2008, but then struggled with injury in 2009. So far (knock on wood) Carlos seems very healthy and without the injury concerns of Rafa. I think his best years were 2010 and 2013, but his peak (best sustained level) was basically 2008 to 2013. Maybe he got a bit better in 2010 than he was in 2008-09, but I think it is close. We don't yet know if Carlos has another octave.

But you're talking about level, aside from injury, right now. Rafa beats anyone on clay, starting in 2005, but I kind of think Carlos is better on grass than Rafa ever was, even after 2008. Hards is...hard. I'd favor Carlos on faster hards, Rafa on slower hards. Meaning, I sort of think they line up similarly as Fedal, but less extreme.

What we don't know is how the match-up would be. While Carlos is more similar to Federer than anyone else, I don't think he'd have quite the trouble that Roger did. Rafa's game was almost designed to neutralize Roger. But I think the difference, what would give Carlos a better shot at peak Rafa, is his mentality. Roger was pretty dug in on his style of play, even though it wasn't working against Rafa. He didn't adapt - at least not until much later. But latter-day Rafa was a different animal; still great, but great in a different way than 2008-13, and Roger adapted to it. I think Carlos would be more adaptable, and his penchant to find a way and come back is comparable to Rafa's. In fact, he might have been able to turn the table on Rafa by never going away. Plus, his speed surpasses even peak Roger, so he might have been able to get to stuff that Roger couldn't.

My favorite "match-up that never was" would have been Sampras-Nadal. I just think that would have been fun. While in some sense Pete was a slightly lesser version than Roger, I think his fighting mentality was stronger and he would have been tough for Rafa...off clay, that is!
 
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MargaretMcAleer

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4th Miami Final,
Sinner d Zverev 63 76(4) highlight of the match was Janniks clutch serving he made 7 1st serves in the TB!
Jannik is the first man in history to reach 3 or more consecutive Masters 1000 finals without dropping a set. since the formats introduction in 1990!
32 consecutive Sets won in Masters 1000
11th consecutive win
7th consecutive win v Zverev
Sinner will play Lehecka in the final
Jannik Forza!
 
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MargaretMcAleer

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Come on Bols, serve it out Forza!
Their 1st Masters 1000 title! Mens Doubles Champions! played aggressive tennis from start to finish.
Bolelli/Vavassori (7) d Heliovarra/Patten (4) 64 62
James Blake is still a very handsome man :)
 
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MargaretMcAleer

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Due to rain,
Sinner v Lehecka on Stadium court will hopefully commence not before 3.45pm local time
Weather update, final hopefully should start at 4.15pm local time
Play has just started
 
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MargaretMcAleer

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After a long rain delay the match finally got underway, Sinner winning the 1st set 64.
Sinner 30/15 on Jiri's 1st service game in the 2nd set, when rain appeared and the match is suspended MEH! not fair to either player.
For the life of me this a Masters 1000 and it rains every year in Miami, get a roof! the womens doubles final had to be relocated to Grandstand because of the rain, and the rain cleared a bit, their match concluded.
Weather update match will not resume before 6.45pm ( I will end up applying for a weather job shortly :)
Players back on court for the 2nd set, just finished their warm up, with Jiri to serve 15-30
 
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MargaretMcAleer

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Jannik Sinner the first player to win the Sunshine Double without losing a set Forza!
Sinner d Jiri 64 64 in a long rain delayed match, well done Jiri!
7th Masters 1000 title ( won the last 3 without dropping a set)
34 consecutive sets won in Masters 1000
26th ATP Title
Jannik Forza

BTW,
This is Jerry Armstrongs last tournament as he is retiring.
 
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MargaretMcAleer

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Seeing Jannik won the Sunshine Double it will be the fourth time in history that the Sunshine Double has been achieved both male and female players in the same year.
Pete Sampras/Steffi Graf 1994
Roger Federer/Kim Clijsters 2005
Novak Djokovic/ Victoria Azarenka 2016
Jannik Sinner/Aryna Sabalenka 2026
 
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britbox

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Post Final Press Conferences



Leo AI Summary

Jannik Sinner (Winner)​

  • Described the win as "very special", particularly after his performance at Indian Wells
  • Listened to music and joked around during the rain delay to ease tension
  • Credits his serve as the key weapon this tournament — hitting 18 consecutive first-serve points at a crucial moment
  • Became the only player to win the Sunshine Double (Indian Wells + Miami), though he avoided comparing it to Grand Slams
  • Acknowledged he gained 2,000 ranking pointsfrom zero this time last year, making a return to No. 1 mathematically possible
  • Spoke about the Sinner/Alcaraz streak — one of them has won every tournament they've both entered since Madrid 2024
  • Trained extensively in California before the swing, focusing on playing in heat conditions
  • Heading to clay season, potentially starting at Monaco, with a mindset of staying present and not overthinking

Jiri Lehecka (Runner-up)​

  • Reached his first ATP Masters 1000 final, and was proud of his consistency throughout the week
  • Identified Sinner's experience and confidence as the decisive factors, particularly five consecutive first serves at 0-40 down
  • Felt he performed better than at Roland Garros 2025, where conditions had been even more difficult for his game style
  • The rain delay helped him regroup mentally, and holding serve at the start of the second set was crucial
  • Highlighted his mental resilience as a major takeaway — particularly his comeback against Taylor Fritz
  • Heading straight to Monte Carlo for the clay season opener, skipping other events
  • On Sinner and Alcaraz's dominance: "It's very good for the sport"— it shows the rest of the field where they need to improve
  • Noted there is still "big, big, big room for improvement" if he wants to consistently challenge the top two