sincaraz miami

The Sunshine Double kicks into a higher—or at least faster—gear in its second half. Miami, like Indian Wells, is a hard-court Masters 1000 with a 96-player draw. But the surface here is a little quicker, the fans a little louder, the humidity a little—OK, a lot—higher, and the pace of life much more frenetic. We’re also one week closer to the start of the Grand Slam season.

Who’s ready to step up their games, or, in the case of the top performers from last week, keep them at a high level? Here are three things to look for as the men move east, and close out hard courts until July.

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Jannik Sinner joins The Big T podcast right after winning Indian Wells

How will their Indian Wells performances affect Carlos Alcaraz and Jannik Sinner?

The state of play among the Top 2 has obviously shifted. Two weeks ago, Alcaraz was undefeated in 2026 and flying as high as he ever has. Sinner, by contrast, had a couple of semifinal losses to show for his season. Another win for Alcaraz and we might have been talking about him as a dominant force by himself, rather than these two as a pair.

But Sinner’s first title in IW, and first of 2026, puts their rivalry at center stage again. He didn’t drop a set, and finished with a furious clutch run of points to finish the final.

Each has won Miami once—Alcaraz in 2022, Sinner in 2024. Neither was a factor last year—Sinner was suspended, and Alcaraz lost to David Goffin in the second round, a result that would mark the low point of his season. The courts, assuming they’re still faster than in IW, are somewhat better-suited for Sinner, who has been to three finals here.

How about their draws? I’ll start by saying that neither has to worry about facing Novak Djokovic, who is not playing. After that, their paths to the finals seem equally manageable, with one early exception.

That exception is Alcaraz’s possible opening-match clash with Joao Fonseca. This is a fearsome-forehand showdown that fans have been waiting for. Fonseca, who pushed Sinner to two tiebreakers in Indian Wells, will have his green-and-gold army with him as well. But he has to get past Fabian Marozsan first.

From there, Alcaraz might face Seb Korda, Karen Kachanov, and either Taylor Fritz, Jack Draper, or Casper Ruud in the quarters.

At the bottom of the draw, Sinner avoids any obvious early-round landmines. His path could take him through the always-feisty Damir Dzumhur in the second round, Corentin Moutet in the third, Cam Norrie or Andrey Rublev in the fourth, and either Jakub Mensik, Frances Tiafoe, or Felix Auger Aliassime in the quarters.

Indian Wells runner-up Daniil Medvedev, who could be called a de facto third seed, is in Sinner’s half.

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Last week Daniil Medvedev broke up a Sinner-Alcaraz showdown. Who has a chance to do the same in Miami?

Jack Draper: With his win over Djokovic in a classic at Indian Wells, the Brit showed that he’s ahead of schedule in his return from injury. But his draw isn’t easy: Reilly Opelka, possibly, first; Taylor Fritz after that; Alcaraz in the quarters.

Jakub Mensik: It feel like very old news now, but he won this tournament a year ago. He could meet a rejuvenated Frances Tiafoe in the third round.

Ben Shelton: The American wasn’t his normal showman self in Indian Wells. A possible illness, and a fall on his back, didn’t help his mood, or his play. Will that make him more motivated for Miami, assuming he’s healthy? He could get Medvedev in the round of 16.

Taylor Fritz: He made the semifinals last year, and would seem to be due for a good result. But he’s also considering skipping the clay season so he can finally get his knee right. That’s not a great sign.

Arthur Fils: A quarterfinalist here last year, he, like Draper, is ahead of schedule in his return to the tour. He’s also not in a quarter with Sinner or Alcaraz.

Medvedev (again): When the Russian gets rolling on hard courts, he can go for a while. In 2019, he made four straight finals on the surface, and in 2023 he won 19 straight matches on it. He’s in that kind of mood again, and he’s not in the same quarter as Sinner or Alcaraz.

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What are the (potential) early-round matches to watch?

Alcaraz vs. Fonseca, second round: The first of hopefully many between two of the most lethal forehands in the game

Tommy Paul vs. Flavio Cobolli, third round: Two loose athletes with major forehands of their own. This feels like night-session fodder

Alexander Bublik vs. Matteo Berrettini, second round

Fils vs. Alex De Minaur, third round

Medvedev vs. Francisco Cerundolo, third round

Tiafoe vs. Mensik, third round

Norrie vs. Alex Michelsen, second round