Rome Masters preview and predictions

The U.S. Open is over, which means it’s time to start focusing on…the clay-court swing?!?! Yes, this is 2020 after all. European clay is normally a thing of the past by this point on the annual calendar, but in 2020 it is just getting started. Miomir Kecmanovic kicked it off with a title in Kitzbuhel on Sunday, and now the clay-court action heats up in a major way with the Rome Masters. U.S. Open finalists Dominic Thiem and Daniil Medvedev are not participating, but both Rafael Nadal and Novak Djokovic are on board.

Internazionali BNL d’Italia

Where: Rome, Italy
Surface: Clay
Points
: 1000
Prize money
: 3,465,045 Euros

Top seed: Novak Djokovic
Defending champion: Rafael Nadal

Draw analysis: Nadal opted not to go over to the United States for the season’s second Grand Slam, instead practicing on clay to gear up for a run at a 10th Rome title—and more importantly a 13th French Open triumph. That is one reason (of many) why he should have an advantage over Pablo Carreno Busta in the second round. Carreno Busta will be making a quick turnaround from hard courts to clay after making a run to the U.S. Open semifinals. The world No. 27 earned a “performance bye” in Rome due to that result, which is why he is already in round two despite being unseeded.

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WWW: Nadal vs. Carreno Busta?


Also in the bottom quarter of the draw are Diego Schwartzman, Andrey Rublev, and Milos Raonic. Nadal could face Raonic in the third round and either Schwartzman or Rublev in the quarters. Potential semifinal opponents are Stefanos Tsitsipas, Denis Shapovalov, and Grigor Dimitrov. Fabio Fognini has a bye in the Tsitsipas section, but the Italian is coming back from ankle surgery and lost his Kitzbuhel opener 6-1, 6-2 to Marc-Andrea Huesler.

At the top of the bracket, the question—of course—is how Djokovic will rebound from his shocking default against Carreno Busta in round four of the U.S. Open. The good news is that he should feel comfortable in Rome, where he is a four-time champion (quite a clay-court accomplishment during the Nadal era). But it won’t be easy, because Stan Wawrinka is also in the top quarter and he has been hard at work on clay with a 7-0 record and two recent Challenger events. That is certainly better preparation for Rome than getting defaulted out of a hard-court slam.

The other semifinal spot in the top half appears to be completely up for grabs. Matteo Berrettini and David Goffin own the first-round byes in that quarter, but Karen Khachanov, Jan-Lennard Struff, and the winner of a first-round showdown between Cristian Garin and Borna Coric should provide plenty of resistance.

First-round upset alert
: Borna Coric over (14) Cristian Garin. Garin is ranked higher and seeded, but the real reason why he is favored here is because of his clay-court exploits earlier in 2020. The 24-year-old Chilean triumphed in Cordoba and Rio de Janeiro, giving him four career ATP titles (all on clay, all in the past two seasons). Still, Coric cannot be discounted. He is coming off a run to the U.S. Open quarterfinals and is certainly no slouch on the slow stuff. One of his two titles and one of his four runner-up performances have come on this surface.

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WWW: Garin vs. Coric?

Hot: Andrey Rublev, Denis Shapovalov, Milos Raonic, Pablo Carreno Busta, Salvatore Caruso, Filip Krajinovic, Jan-Lennard Struff, Borna Coric, Miomir Kecmanovic, Dan Evans

Cold: Fabio Fognini, Kei Nishikori, Nikoloz Basilashvili, Kevin Anderson, Sam Querrey, Hubert Hurkacz, Dusan Lajovic

Quarterfinal predictions: Stan Wawrinka over Novak Djokovic, David Goffin over Jan-Lennard Struff, Stefanos Tsitsipas over Guido Pella, and Rafael Nadal over Andrey Rublev

Semifinals: Wawrinka over Goffin and Nadal over Rublev

Final: Nadal over Wawrinka

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Who will win Rome?

3 Comments on Rome Masters preview and predictions

    • Welp, I’m so over it! Taping the men’s final but not planning to watch it unless AZ pulls off some kind of miracle to make it interesting.

      Rafa has a brutal draw in Rome for a 34 yo guy that hasn’t played in 6 months! Vamos Rafa!

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