Wednesday April 15 will stand out as one of the defining days of this clay swing. Between a headline withdrawal, a qualifier shaking up the draw and a youth-driven duel set for Munich, the ATP and WTA delivered twist after twist.
In Barcelona, the main shock came from the men's second round. Serbian qualifier Hamad Medjedovic, ranked No. 76, dismantled third seed Alex de Minaur 6-3, 6-4. The Australian, despite clear progress on clay over the past twelve months, never found an answer to an opponent who landed more than 70% of first serves and dictated rallies from the baseline. The win turns Medjedovic into a credible title contender, especially in the wake of Carlos Alcaraz's withdrawal announced just afterwards.
The other spectacular sequence in Barcelona came from Nuno Borges. The Portuguese beat Tomas Martin Etcheverry 6-3, 7-6(4), closing the match with an improvised underarm serve on match point. The shot, perfectly disguised, left the Argentine stunned and went viral within hours. Cameron Norrie needed three sets (6-3, 4-6, 6-4) to dispatch Ethan Quinn, while young Spaniard Rafael Jodar extended his breakthrough run by beating Camilo Ugo Carabelli 6-3, 6-3.
Over to Munich for the most appetising pairing of the week. continued his Bavarian surge by demolishing seventh seed Arthur Rinderknech 6-3, 6-2. The 19-year-old Brazilian needed just one hour and fifteen minutes to send the Frenchman to the locker room, and his forehand aggression is starting to worry even the sharpest clay-court specialists. Shortly after, , the second seed, had to dig deeper than expected against Belgian wild card Alexander Blockx before prevailing 6-4, 7-6(8). The Fonseca-Shelton quarter-final promises an explosion of power.
In Stuttgart, the round of 16 belonged to . The Polish third seed dispatched veteran Laura Siegemund 6-2, 6-3 in one hour and thirty minutes. For her first event working with Francisco Roig, the former Rafael Nadal coach, Swiatek showed sharper footwork and better shot selection, preventing the German from triggering her favoured patterns. Up next: the quarter-finals and a potential meeting with Karolina Muchova, if the Czech confirms on Thursday.
Thursday promises more of the same. must navigate past Gabriel Diallo in Munich, starts her Stuttgart campaign against Diana Shnaider, and Barcelona rolls into its third round. Clay is boiling.


