Turin is known as the Paris of Italy, and halfway through the competition, the ATP Finals are as good, if not better, than anything on the Roland Garros clay.
The top eight players are giving everything in Torino, despite fatigue, injuries, gripes over the schedule, and a run-in with the Grand Slams over money and player welfare. The show must go on, and it is providing rich entertainment.
These players are not going through the motions at the end of a long campaign. Holder Jannik Sinner, Carlos Alcaraz, Alexander Zverev, Ben Shelton, Taylor Fritz and Alex de Minaur met thousands of fans lining the blue carpet before the tournament began, partaking in a ‘Meet the Champions’ question and answer session. They have carried that spirit into the competition.
Sinner is the darling of the Italian media, but the other homeboy, Lorenzo Musetti, gave the crowd a visceral treat at the Inalpi Arena on Tuesday night. Musetti came in as a last-minute replacement for Novak Djokovic, who beat the Italian in a marathon three-hour final at the Hellenic Championship on Saturday. If the last few days are anything to go by, three-set epics really are the new Mini-Slams.
Musetti looked like a beaten man, shorn of energy if not hair, when De Minaur took the second set in virtual silence. To sprint from a gladiatorial effort in Greece against Djokovic to the fastest running man in the sport was surely one Italian job too far.
This week’s tennis has had its share of curveballs and imperfect chaos, adding an edge that all sports need. The home crowd came to life after an unfortunate series of events as a medical emergency during the decisive third set flustered the Australian more than Musetti.
The stadium turned into a football amphitheater, pumped by the reanimation of the temperamental Tuscan. After being dead on his feet, the world No. 9’s legs became fresh Ferrari tyres. The celebration felt like a maiden slam win as the 23-year-old jumped into his team’s arms.
The ATP Finals is the big finale to the men’s singles circus. Sometimes, it has spluttered to the end. There hasn’t been a three-set final since the event was moved to Turin after an 12-year tenure in London. In 2025, the tournament is packing a big punch. There’s more of a pugilistic feel to the action and entrance. It always matters, but this one means more.
Fritz fought like a lionheart, storming into the match against Alcaraz with a huge artillery of aggression and purpose. The American doesn’t always engage his inner fire, but this was a blueprint for the future, which eventually ran out of ink. Alcaraz had to dig in for sheer life just to avoid a straight-sets defeat. The fifth game of the second set had eight deuces. The round-robin stage has been as riveting as any straight knockout match.
Felix Auger-Aliassime pulled up lame against Sinner, but refused to cede to Shelton in another Gran Turismo tussle on Wednesday. Only Zverev dropped back into passive mode, giving way to his current nemesis for the fifth successive time. Sinner is the stuff of nightmares for the German.
If the ATP Finals are the unofficial fifth major, then the Turin experience has been a big hit so far. It will return in 2026 and stay in Italy up to 2030, possibly at a new arena built for the 2026 Milan-Cortina Olympics. The Italian Ministry of Sport has committed $100 million to supporting the event for the next five years.
The Musetti and De Minaur match rekindled the spectacle of great tennis theatre. These weren’t the two best players in the world, but the match was an authentic battle for last man standing. The Six Kings Slam gives holographs and light shows. The U.S. Open is like a summer party driven by an A-lister celebrity watch. Tennis is the content that counts.
The ATP Finals is excelling on its own terms in a sport that is being split by fragmentation and a lot of player frustration. This week, the combatants are putting on a show by taking it out on the court.

