Flavio Cobolli is establishing himself as Italy's newest force on the ATP Tour. At Madrid, the World No.10 crossed a symbolic threshold by eliminating Daniil Medvedev in the round of 16, 6-3, 5-7, 6-4. It was his first top-10 victory on clay, and his third against a top-10 opponent overall.
Cobolli's rise commands attention. The 23-year-old Italian has climbed dramatically through the rankings over the past year, graduating from qualifier status to being seeded at Masters 1000 events. His game translates particularly well to clay: powerful groundstrokes, a reliable two-handed backhand, and the patience to construct points methodically before accelerating at the right moment.
Against Medvedev on Tuesday evening, Cobolli displayed exactly that combination. Dominant in the first set thanks to incisive returning, he absorbed the Russian's fightback in the second without losing composure. In the decider, he broke serve in the ninth game before winning 12 of the last 13 points to close out the match — composure well beyond his years.
This Madrid run follows an equally impressive result two weeks ago — a semifinal victory over Alexander Zverev in Munich, 6-3, 6-3, without facing a single break point. Fate has arranged a rematch in the Madrid quarterfinals. Zverev leads their head-to-head 2-1, but the Italian now holds the clay-court blueprint to beat the German.
Behind World No.1 , Italian tennis continues to thrive on the international stage. and now Cobolli carry the Azzurri colours with impressive consistency. A win over Zverev on Wednesday could see Cobolli finish the week inside the top 12. At 23, the Roman's ascent shows no signs of slowing.

