For weeks in which no members of the Big 3 participate, this one is about as big as it gets. The European indoor swing heats up with a 500-point tournament in Rotterdam, where Stefanos Tsitsipas and defending champion Andrey Rublev are two of the contenders. At the inaugural Dallas 250, a strong American contingent is led by Taylor Fritz, Reilly Opelka, John Isner, and Jenson Brooksby. Last but not least, Juan Martin Del Potro is finally making his return to tennis. But it could be a bittersweet one in Buenos Aires….
ABN AMRO World Tennis Tournament
Where: Rotterdam, The Netherlands
Surface: Indoor hard
Points: 500
Prize money: 1,208,315 Euros
Top seed: Stefanos Tsitsipas
Defending champion: Andrey Rublev
Draw analysis: Daniil Medvedev understandably needs some more time to recover from the Australian Open (and specifically the final against Rafael Nadal), but the field remains an impressive one for the first ATP 500 of the year despite the Russian’s withdrawal. Tsitsipas is now the No. 1 seed, and his draw is not a bad one. Although Alejandro Davidovich Fokina is not the easiest of first-round opponents, Tsitsipas should not have much trouble on an indoor hard court. The Greek is on a collision course with Nikoloz Basilashvili for the quarterfinals and with Hubert Hurkacz or Denis Shapovalov in the semis. Botic Van de Zandschulp could present some early-round problems for Hurkacz and Shapovalov.
A more difficult bottom half of the bracket features Rublev, Felix Auger-Aliassime, Andy Murray, and Aslan Karatsev. Murray opens against Montpellier champion Alexander Bublik and could run into Auger-Aliassime in the last 16. Karatsev may bow out right away at the hands of in-form Dutch wild card Tallon Griekspoor. Whoever wins that Karatsev-Griekspoor contest will most likely be the eventual quarterfinal opponent for Rublev.
Hot: Felix Auger-Aliassime, Tallon Griekspoor, Arthur Rinderknech, Mikael Ymer, Alexander Bublik, Botic Van de Zandschulp
Cold: Ugo Humbert, David Goffin, Jo-Wilfried Tsonga, Lorenzo Musetti
Quarterfinal predictions: Alex de Minaur over Stefanos Tsitsipas, Botic Van de Zandschulp over Denis Shapovalov, Felix Auger-Aliassime over Karen Khachanov, and Andrey Rublev over Tallon Griekspoor
Semifinals: De Minaur over Van de Zandschulp and Rublev over Auger-Aliassime
Final: Rublev over De Minaur
Dallas Open
Where: Dallas, Texas
Surface: Indoor hard
Points: 250
Prize money: $708,530
Top seed: Taylor Fritz
Defending champion: Inaugural event
Draw analysis: Look no further than the Isner section of the draw to get an idea of what the first-ever Dallas Open is all about. Kevin Anderson and Sam Querrey are going head-to-head in the opening round; the winner will meet Isner; the winner of that could potentially face Maxime Cressy in the quarterfinals; the winner of that would likely get Opelka in the semis. Yes, there are a ton of Americans (Anderson not included) in the field and there will be plenty of huge serving from start to finish.
The other half of the bracket should feature some longer rallies, although Fritz has also been known to take the racket out of opponents’ hands. Fritz has been in outstanding form dating back to last fall, so he is an obvious title favorite. The 24-year-old has a favorable draw, too, until potentially going up against either Brooksby or Brandon Nakashima in the semifinals. Brooksby and Nakashima are also two of the USA’s brightest rising stars. It’s an intriguing mix of youngsters and veterans (including 40-year-old Feliciano Lopez) in Dallas.
Hot: Taylor Fritz, Adrian Mannarino, Maxime Cressy, Oscar Otte
Cold: John Isner, Jack Sock, Tennys Sandgren, Feliciano Lopez, Andreas Seppi, Kevin Anderson, Sam Querrey
Quarterfinal predictions: Taylor Fritz over Marcos Giron, Brandon Nakashima over Jenson Brooksby, Maxime Cressy over John Isner, and Reilly Opelka over Steve Johnson
Semifinals: Fritz over Nakashima and Cressy over Opelka
Final: Fritz over Cressy
Argentina Open
Where: Buenos Aires, Argentina
Surface: Clay
Points: 250
Prize money: $602,250
Top seed: Casper Ruud
Defending champion: Diego Schwartzman
Draw analysis: Yes, Del Potro is back. Unfortunately it may be more of a farewell than a comeback; those were the Argentine’s exact words at his pre-tournament press conference. Unable to fully recover from ongoing knee problems, Del Potro plans to retire at this Buenos Aires tournament or the following week in Rio de Janeiro. The 2009 U.S. Open champion will begin what could be his final event against compatriot Federico Delbonis in what could be his final match. Should Del Potro improbably put together a deep run, Fabio Fognini and Alejandro Tabilo are potential quarterfinal foes and Casper Ruud would probably loom large in the semis.
Albert Ramos-Vinolas just beat Tabilo in the Cordoba title match and the Spaniard’s draw in Buenos Aires is relatively open. Argentine up-and-comer Sebastian Baez may be a factor along with Lorenzo Sonego and Laslo Djere as they look to challenge Diego Schwartzman at the bottom of the bracket. Baez has an especially intriguing opener on his hands against fellow NextGen star Holger Rune.
Hot: Miomir Kecmanovic, Sebastian Baez, Alejando Tabilo
Cold: Fernando Verdasco, Juan Ignacio Londero, Benoit Paire, Pablo Cuevas
Quarterfinal predictions: Casper Ruud over Federico Coria, Alejandro Tabilo over Federico Delbonis, Sebastian Baez over Albert Ramos-Vinolas, and Diego Schwartzman over Facundo Bagnis
Semifinals: Ruud over Tabilo and Schwartzman over Baez
Final: Ruud over Schwartzman
Delpo