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With most of the top players off, there are almost no moves inside the top 20.
But with three ATP 250s and a lot of Challengers on the docket, plenty of ranking opportunities.
Notably for the Americans in Houston, where there was an all-Yankee quarterfinal roster.
Jenson Brooksby, whose actual ranking was outside the top 500 when he got a wild card into the qualifying and made a run, was the biggest opportunist and ran all the way to his first career ATP Tour title.
For the complete, updated ATP Tour rankings for this Monday,
click here.
(First-round Monte Carlo opponents in brackets)
Jack Draper (GBR): No. 7 ===========> No. 6 (Draper didn’t play last week; he’s training on the clay. But with Casper Ruud dropping some points from last year he moves up to a new career high) (Bye, Giron/Shapovalov).

Sebastian Baez (ARG): No. 36 ===========> No. 33 (Baez had some help from the rain in stopping the momentum of Canadian Gabriel Diallo in Bucharest and ran it all the way to the final. But he was beaten by Cobolli)(Tomas Machac).
Flavio Cobolli (ITA): No. 45 ===========> No. 36 (The 22-year-old Italian wins in Bucharest, one of two young Italians to win on Sunday. After losing his openers in eight straight events, he comes for the hardware. Open Court’s theory is that the unfortunate mullet he decided to start the year in Australia with has finally grown out) ([Q] Dusan Lajovic).

Luciano Darderi (ITA): No. 56 ===========> No. 48 (Darderi, 23, wins in Marrakech and moves back into the top 50 with his second career ATP Tour title. The first came in Cordoba last year, when he won out of the qualifying. Unfortunately for him, it means he couldn’t play the qualfifying in Monte Carlo, as he wasn’t eligible for a special exempt).
Mattia Bellucci (ITA): No. 71 ===========> No. 66 (Bellucci, 23, is another rising young Italian and his run to the Marrakech quarterfinals puts him at a career high).


Gabriel Diallo (CAN): No. 81 ===========> No. 79 (A career high and first trip into the top 80 for the 23-year-old Canadian, who made the second round in Bucharest. He has already lost in Monte Carlo, in a tight one against Corentin Moutet in the first round on Saturday).
Vit Kopriva (CZE): No. 106 ===========> No. 95 (At 27, Kopriva is into the top 100 for the first time in his career after making the Marrakech quarterfinals).
Kamil Majchrzak (POL): No. 122 ===========> No. 102 (It’s been a long road back for Majchrzak after a doping suspension. But he’s five points away from jumping back into the top 100 after making the semifinals in Marrakech as a qualifier).

Jenson Brooksby (USA): No. 507 ===========> No. 172 (Brooksby got a wild card into the Houston qualifying and ran that break all the way to the title, saving match point three times during the week including against Tommy Paul in the semifinals on Saturday. And he won going away against three-time finalist (and 2023 champion) Frances Tiafoe).


Jack Draper (GBR) (No. 6)
Brandon Nakashima (USA) (No. 31)
Alexandre Muller (FRA) (No. 39)
Francisco Comesana (ARG) (No. 66)
Gabriel Diallo (CAN) (No. 79)
Vit Kopriva (CZE) (No. 95)
Jesper de Jong (NED) (No. 96)
Ethan Quinn (USA) (No. 123)
Dalibor Svcina (CZE) (No. 140)
Vilius Gaubas (No. 148)
Colton Smith (USA) (No. 166)

Casper Ruud (NOR): No. 6 ===========> No. 7 (Ruud drops points from a final in Estoril a year ago. And he has the points from making the final in Monte Carlo coming up for renewal next week. That’s 650 of them – which in the worst-case scenario would drop him out of the top 10 if he goes out quickly. His first opponent will be either Roberto Bautista Agut or Brandon Nakashima)(Bye, Bautista Agut/Nakashima).
Hubert Hurkacz (POL): No. 22 ===========> No. 26 (Hurkacz didn’t defend his title in Estoril last week, dropping those points. It was also announced that he’ll miss Monte Carlo, where he posted 100 points a year ago. Hurkacz’s career high of No. 6 came last August).

Matteo Berrettini (ITA): No. 27 ===========> No. 34 (Berrettini won the Marrakech event last year, but didn’t return to defend it this year. That decision drops him out of the top 30) ([Q] Mariano Navone).
Roberto Carballes Baena (ESP): No. 51 ===========> No. 57 (Carballes Baena made the semis in Marrakech. But he was defending finalist points, so he drops).
Mariano Navone (ARG): No. 61 ===========> No. 70 (Navone lost in the second round in Bucharest, dropping the points from a semifinal a year ago) (Matteo Berrettini).

Fabio Fognini (ITA): No. 99 ===========> No. 113 (The 37-year-old Italian is still kicking, grinding it out mostly in the Challengers. But after a first-round loss in Marrakech he drops out of the top 100. He has a wild card into Monte Carlo this week, as a former champion, and meets Francisco Cerundolo in the first round)(Francisco Cerundolo).
Thiago Agustin Tirante (ARG): No. 111 ===========> No. 135 (Tirante won the Mexico City Challenger a year ago. But he lost in the first round of the Morelos Challenger to Stefan Kozlov last week).
Cristian Garin (CHI): No. 133 ===========> No. 160 (Garin, a former No. 17 – back in Sept. 2021 – got a wild card into Houston but got a tough draw, losing to top seed Tommy Paul in the second round, in a third-set tiebreak. He made the semis in Estoril last year. Garin won Houston in 2019, the first time he played it, and made the semis in 2022 and the quarters in 2023).


Alexis Galarneau (CAN): No. 162 ===========> No. 182 (Galarneau, the No. 2 seed at the Challenger in Morelos this week, made the semifinals. But he made the final in Mexico City at a similar event a year ago and so he had a lot to defend. Even making the final again would have dropped him 10 spots but as it was, he lost nearly 20 by losing on Saturday).











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