The world tennis tournament is still going on non-stop, so let's take a look at the ATP rankings this week.
In the top 10 list of the most talked-about races, British brother Draper entered the world top 10 for the first time in his career with his victory in Indian Wells. Someone joins means someone falls behind, and this time it was De Minaur's turn.
In the top 10 rankings, Deyo, who was eliminated early at the Indian Wells Masters, rose to fourth place instead of dropping. In the semifinals, Mr. Mei, who was eliminated in the semifinals, fell to eighth place.
Rune, who missed out on a second Masters title, moved up slightly in the rankings, but is still some way from his fourth highest ranking. From snatching a set from Sinner at this year's Australian Open, to winning his third Masters runner-up this time, Rune is finally showing some signs of recovery.
The biggest move up the top 100 is the highly anticipated Brazilian teenager Fonseca, who has quietly climbed to 60th place, soaring 20 places to a new career high.
After beating Feinley on his Indian Wells debut, Fonseca moved on to the high-stakes Phoenix Challenger, where he dropped just one set to win his third Challenger title, beating the likes of Struf, Kei Nishikori and Bubrik.
Worthy of mention, Faith was also the 18th career-high of the year, reaching the quarter-finals of the Masters for the first time at Indian Wells, beating the likes of Musetti on his way to the finals. Although they lost to former tournament runner-up Dmitry Medvedev in the quarterfinals, Fez's ranking still reached a new career high, and he was close to France's No. 1 Embel.
Also impressive at the start of the season was the Dutchman's Grykspoor, another player to reach the quarter-finals at the Indian Wells Masters, notably his first victory over top seed Zverev for his first win over the world's top five. He also defeated French heavy gunners Pericar and Yosuke Mianguan on his way to qualify, moving up nine places to No.34 in the world.
Kei Nishikori, a former Grand Slam runner-up and world ranked fourth during his time with the Big Three, continued to climb the rankings after returning from injury. After being named last year's Comeback Player of the Year, he has four more wins in Indian Wells and Phoenix. He moved up 12 places to No. 64 in the world, his highest ranking since May 2022. The comeback road looks good.(Source: Tennis Home Author: Luo Cheng Qiye)