Teen Sensation Fonseca Storms Into Monte Carlo Masters Quarterfinals

Brazilian teenager Joao Fonseca has made history by becoming the youngest quarterfinalist at the Monte Carlo Masters since Rafael Nadal and Richard Gasquet in 2005. The 19-year-old delivered a commanding performance, defeating Matteo Berrettini 6-3, 6-2 with impressive serve statistics. This marks Fonseca's first ATP Masters 1000 quarterfinal and the first for a Brazilian since 2011. He next awaits the winner of the match between Alexander Zverev and Zizou Bergs.

Key Points: Joao Fonseca Youngest Monte Carlo QFist Since Nadal, Gasquet

  • Youngest QFist since 2005
  • Dominant 6-3, 6-2 win
  • First Brazilian Masters QF since 2011
  • Soars to No. 35 in live rankings
  • Next faces Zverev/Bergs winner
2 min read

Monte Carlo Masters: Fonseca enters ATP Masters 1000 QF for the first time

Brazilian teen Joao Fonseca, 19, beats Matteo Berrettini to become the youngest Monte Carlo Masters quarterfinalist since 2005. Historic ATP run.

"Fonseca is the youngest quarterfinalist at the Monte-Carlo Masters since 18-year-olds Rafael Nadal and Richard Gasquet achieved the feat in 2005."

Monaco, April 9

Brazilian teenager Joao Fonseca has become the youngest quarterfinalist at the Monte-Carlo Masters since 18-year-olds Rafael Nadal and Richard Gasquet achieved the feat in 2005. He won a forehand battle with Matteo Berrettini, 10 years his senior, on Thursday.

The 19-year-old claimed four service breaks and dropped just three points on his first serve in a 6-3, 6-2 victory to advance to his first quarterfinal at the ATP Masters 1000 level. Moreover, Fonseca is the second man born in 2006 to reach the quarterfinals at an ATP Masters 1000 event, joining Martin Landaluce, who reached that stage in Miami last month.

As both players uncorked their serves and forehands, there was little separating them in the match until Fonseca put Berrettini on the back foot in the eighth game. Backpedalling at the net, the Italian netted an awkward lob, and then on break point down, he netted an overly aggressive forehand moving backwards deep and wide behind the baseline to drop serve. Fonseca then served out the set to love, according to reports.

The decisive moment of the second set came in the fifth game. Berrettini had just broken back for 2-all but was staring down a break point. Fonseca's routine cross-court forehand volley clipped the net, giving Berrettini plenty of time to set up a midcourt pass into an open court. Still, the Italian pushed it wide as the Brazilian hustled to his left to entice the 29-year-old into overplaying his forehand.

Fonseca, who is the first Brazilian Masters 1000 quarter-finalist since Thomaz Bellucci in Madrid in 2011, will next meet the winner of the match between third-seeded German Alexander Zverev and Belgian Zizou Bergs.

Fonseca, who is making his debut in Monte-Carlo, is up five spots to No. 35 in the ATP Live Rankings after levelling his ATP Head-to-Head series with Berrettini at 1-1.

Berrettini, meanwhile, remains at No. 90 in the Live Rankings, far below his career-high of No. 6.

- IANS

Share this article:

Reader Comments

S
Sarah B
As a tennis fan from India, it's thrilling to see new faces challenge the established order. Berrettini is a tough opponent, and Fonseca dismantled him. Hope he goes deep in the tournament!
P
Priya S
Amazing story! But a small note to the article - it would be good to mention how this impacts the broader tennis landscape, especially for South American players. Still, kudos to the young man! 👏
V
Vikram M
This is the kind of sports news I love. A new generation is here. Makes me wonder when we will see an Indian player make a similar splash at a Masters 1000 event. Our players need more support and exposure on such stages.
R
Rohit P
Wow! Just 19. The composure under pressure is incredible. Dropping only 3 points on first serve is a crazy stat. Zverev or Bergs next will be a huge test. Let's see if he can handle the pressure of a first Masters QF.
M
Michael C
Feel for Berrettini though. Injuries have really hampered his career. From World No. 6 to 90... tennis can be brutal. But full credit to Fonseca for taking his chance. The match decided by those few key points.

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

Leave a Comment

Minimum 50 characters 0/50