Sat, 23 May 2026 · LIVE
Updated May 23, 2026 · 09:25
Sports World News Updated May 23, 2026

Tommy Paul Stages Comeback to Reach Hamburg Open Final

Tommy Paul staged an impressive comeback to defeat Alex de Minaur 2-6, 6-3, 6-3 in the Hamburg Open semifinals. The sixth-seeded American won nine straight games after trailing 3-0 in the second set to reach his 10th ATP Tour-level final. He will face qualifier Ignacio Buse, who became the first Peruvian man to reach an ATP final since 2007. Meanwhile at the Geneva Open, Learner Tien defeated Alexander Bublik to reach his first clay-court final, where he will face Mariano Navone.

ATP Roundup: Tommy Paul fights back to reach Hamburg Open final, Tien advances in Geneva

Hamburg, May 23

Tommy Paul made an impressive comeback to secure his spot in the Hamburg Open final after beating Australia's Alex de Minaur 2-6, 6-3, 6-3 in Friday's semifinal in Germany.

The sixth-seeded American seemed on track for a straight-sets loss after losing the first set and going down 3-0 in the second. However, Paul changed the course of the match by winning nine straight games, taking control of the final set. This win marked the 28-year-old's 10th ATP Tour-level final and his second on clay this season, following his title win in Houston last month.

Even though De Minaur saved 13 out of 17 break points he faced, he struggled with his second serve, winning only 44 percent of those points as Paul gradually wore him down from the baseline.

Paul will now compete against qualifier Ignacio Buse in the final. The 22-year-old continued his strong performance with a convincing 6-1, 6-4 win over lucky loser Aleksandar Kovacevic in just 64 minutes. Buse is the first Peruvian man to reach an ATP Tour-level final since Luis Horna in 2007. Although he made only 42 percent of his first serves, Buse was effective on serve overall, winning 89 percent of his service points.

Meanwhile, at the Geneva Open in Switzerland, American youngster Learner Tien defeated Kazakhstan's Alexander Bublik 6-1, 4-6, 7-6(5) to reach the first clay-court final of his career.

Tien seemed poised for an easy win after jumping to a 6-1 lead in the deciding set tiebreak, but nerves set in as he missed four match points before finally securing victory on his fifth chance. The 20-year-old became the youngest Geneva finalist since Sergi Bruguera in 1990 and the first American man to reach a final there since Aaron Krickstein in 1984.

In Saturday's final, Tien will face Argentina's Mariano Navone, who upset three-time Geneva champion Casper Ruud 7-5, 6-2 in the other semifinal. Navone hit 27 winners and made fewer unforced errors than Ruud in a strong all-around performance. The winner of the final will earn the second ATP Tour-level title of their career.

— IANS

Reader Comments

Shreya B

De Minaur saved 13 of 17 break points but still lost—that stat tells you how relentless Paul was from the baseline. I've been following Paul since his Australian Open semifinal run in 2023, and he's become such a solid all-court player. The Hamburg final should be exciting against Buse, who seems to be serving lights out even with a low first-serve percentage. 🎾

Deepak U

Learner Tien—what a name for a tennis player! And he's living up to it, reaching his first clay-court final in Geneva. Missing four match points before closing it out shows his mental toughness, but also some nerves. He needs to work on that composure. Navone upsetting Ruud is a big result too—Ruud is a three-time champion there! Tien vs Navone should be a cracker. Great to see American youngsters dominating on clay, which was never their forte.

Neha E

Slightly disappointed for Bublik—he's such an entertaining player with his unorthodox style. But Tien played a great tiebreak eventually. The kid is only 20, and he's already the youngest Geneva finalist since Bruguera in 1990! That's some company. Indian tennis could learn from how Americans are developing clay-court talent. We have great infrastructure for tennis, but clay courts are rare here. Maybe it's time to invest in some red dirt? 🙏

Jessica F

As someone who plays tennis recreationally here in Bangalore, I have to say clay-court tennis is so underrated. It's more about endurance and strategy than just power. Paul's win over De Minaur is a textbook example—he wore him down from the baseline. And Buse winning 89% of service points despite only 42% first serves? That's incredible placement and spin. The final between Paul and Buse could go either way. Paul's experience vs Buse's momentum.

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

Reader Voices

Leave a comment

Be kind. Add to the conversation. 0/50
Thank you — your comment has been submitted.
JS blocked