All eight fourth round ATP singles matches are scheduled for Tuesday, and the youth of the sport will be on full display. At the age of 26, Nick Kyrgios is the oldest player remaining. The matches include seven of the top 10 seeds, but the day’s Order of Play is highlighted by a rematch of an exhilarating third round match from last year’s US Open, where Carlos Alcaraz upset Stefanos Tsitsipas in a fifth-set tiebreak. Other compelling men’s matchups include US Open Daniil Medvedev against American Jenson Brooksby, and Nick Kyrgios facing Jannik Sinner, who has amazingly saved eight match points across his last two matches.
Also on Tuesday, the first two women’s singles quarterfinals will be staged. Two of the WTA’s most powerful sluggers will face off, as Naomi Osaka takes on Danielle Collins. And Olympic gold medalist Belinda Bencic plays a resurgent Daria Saville.
Unfortunately, the day’s two most blockbuster matchups are scheduled at the same time, so a second screen would be highly beneficial.
Each day, this preview will analyze the two most intriguing matchups, while highlighting other notable matches on the schedule. Tuesday’s play gets underway at 11:00am local time.
Danielle Collins (9) vs. Naomi Osaka – Not Before 7:00pm on Stadium Court
Both women have played excellently thus far. Osaka has not dropped a set through three matches, while Collins comfortably dispatched of Ons Jabeur on Monday. But their two previous meetings have been quite one-sided. Four years ago in Beijing, Osaka won 6-1, 6-0. Three years ago in Indian Wells, Osaka won 6-4, 6-2. This is obviously not a good matchup for Collins, and it won’t help that Naomi is playing more loose, inspired tennis than she has in 12 months. When Osaka gets deep into events, she’s extremely hard to deter. As per Tennis Abstract, she’s claimed eight of her last nine quarterfinals. Even though that only loss was at this event a year ago, I don’t expect history to repeat itself on Tuesday.
Stefanos Tsitsipas (3) vs. Carlos Alcaraz (14) – Not Before 7:00pm on Grandstand Court
When these two last played, it was a career breakthrough for Alcaraz. Much had been said and written regarding the Spaniard’s potential, but it wasn’t fully realized until his four-hour, five-set upset of Tsitsipas. Since that day, Carlos has become a star, while Stefanos has struggled. The Greek has not won a title since his demoralizing loss from two sets up in the French Open final to Novak Djokovic. And an elbow injury has hindered Tsitsipas since last season. Alcaraz is an awesome 14-2 in 2022, and would debut inside the top 15 with a win on Tuesday. However, his two losses have come against the only two top 10 players he’s faced: Rafael Nadal and Matteo Berrettini. In fact, his US Open victory over Tsitsipas is his only top five win to date. However, based on how confidently the 18-year-old is playing, I suspect that will change on Tuesday.
Other Notable Matches on Tuesday:
Sascha Zverev (2) vs. Thanasi Kokkinakis (Q) – Zverev failed to get beyond the fourth round at both this year’s Australian Open and Indian Wells. Kokkinakis has already won five matches this fortnight, and outlasted Denis Kudla on Sunday in a third-set tiebreak.
Casper Ruud (6) vs. Cam Norrie (10) – These players met twice last fall, with both matches on hard courts, and both matches going to Ruud. Neither player dropped a set in their first two rounds.
Daniil Medvedev (1) vs. Jenson Brooksby – This should be a fascinating matchup between two of the sport’s most unique players. Medvedev can regain the No.1 ranking with two more victories this week. Brooksby made an amazing comeback on Monday against Roberto Bautista Agut, fighting back from 0-4 down in the third to win the last six games of the match.
Jannik Sinner (9) vs. Nick Kyrgios – Sinner saved three match points on Friday against Emil Ruusuvuori, and five match points on Sunday against Pablo Carreno Busta. Kyrgios has dominated this fortnight, dropping only nine games across his last four sets.
Belinda Bencic (22) vs. Daria Saville (WC) – Bencic has eased to this stage, as she’s yet to face a top 50 player. Saville, who was formerly Gavrilova before marrying fellow Australian player Luke Saville, is a former top 20 player who has battled injury for years, and is now ranked 249th in the world. She’s 2-1 against Belinda, though they haven’t met in nearly seven years.
Frances Tiafoe (28) vs. Francisco Cerundolo – Tiafoe defeated Francisco’s younger brother Juan Manuel in the last round. The older Cerundolo brother has upset both Reilly Opelka and Gael Monfils, and notably was the runner-up last year in Buenos Aires.
Hubert Hurkacz (8) vs. Lloyd Harris – Both men survived tough three-setters on Monday afternoon: Hurkacz over Aslan Karatsev, and Harris over Yoshihito Nishioka.
Taylor Fritz (11) vs. Miomir Kecmanovic – As Ben Rothenberg highlighted on Twitter, these are two of only five players, male or female, who have reached the fourth round this year at the Australian Open, Indian Wells, and Miami. After his win on Monday, Fritz described the ankle he injured during his Indian Wells title run as worsening. Kecmanovic has collected 16 main draw wins this season, and is being coached by David Nalbandian.
Tuesday’s full Order of Play is here.