Next Gen
Kouame, 17, follows Nadal with rare Masters 1000 breakthrough

#NextGenATP Jodar & Blanch also earn first ATP Masters 1000 wins

March 19, 2026

ATP Tour

Moise Kouame is the youngest ATP Masters 1000 winner since Rafael Nadal in Hamburg in 2003.
By Jerome Coombe

Moise Kouame stole the spotlight on Thursday at the Miami Open presented by Itau, where he became the first player born in 2009 or later to win an ATP Tour match, underlining the strength of tennis’ rising generation.

Competing as a wild card in his first main-draw ATP Masters 1000 match, the 17-year-old Frenchman delivered a composed performance to defeat qualifier Zachary Svajda 5-7, 6-4, 6-4 and carve his name into the history books. With his victory, Kouame became the the youngest Miami match winner and the youngest to claim an ATP Masters 1000 victory since Rafael Nadal in Hamburg in 2003.

Remember his name! 👏@moisekouame09 becomes the youngest man to win an ATP Masters 1000 match since Rafael Nadal in 2003!

He defeated Svajda 5-7, 6-4, 6-4.@MiamiOpen | #MiamiOpen pic.twitter.com/Whl7EmBNA6

— ATP Tour (@atptour) March 19, 2026

Serving at 3-4 in the second set, Kouame fell into a 0/40 hole, but rattled off 14 of the next 16 points to seize control and force a decider. Overall, the 6’3” talent saved 10 of 12 break points, according to Infosys ATP Stats, to close out the win in two hours, 17 minutes.

At a career-high World No. 385, Kouame is the youngest player inside the Top 900 of the PIF ATP Rankings and has climbed to fourth in the Next Gen Race. Next up in Miami, he faces 21st seed Jiri Lehecka as he looks to extend his dream debut.

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Rafael Jodar ensured Thursday’s spotlight on youth didn’t fade. The 19-year-old Spaniard overcame fellow qualifier Yannick Hanfmann 6-4, 4-6, 6-1 to secure his maiden Masters 1000 victory and move to the brink of a Top 100 debut.

The Madrid native is now up to No. 93 in the PIF ATP Live Rankings — a remarkable rise considering he was ranked outside the Top 900 just 12 months ago. He won three ATP Challenger titles at the end of last season to earn his place at the 20-and-under Next Gen ATP Finals.

Since turning professional in January after one year at the University of Virginia, Jodar has continued to accelerate. He qualified for his first tour-level main draw at the Australian Open and reached the second round, before adding three more ATP Tour wins in Dallas, Acapulco and Delray Beach — where he pushed top seed Taylor Fritz in a tight contest.

Now Jodar has another opportunity in Miami: Following the withdrawal of World No. 5 Lorenzo Musetti, his section of the draw has opened, with lucky loser Aleksandar Vukic awaiting in the second round for their first Lexus ATP Head2Head meeting.

Currently leading the Next Gen Race ahead of Joao Fonseca, Jodar is firmly on track for a return to the Next Gen ATP Finals and, like Kouame, showing that the sport’s future is bright.

Darwin Blanch became the third #NextGenATP victor on Thursday afternoon in Miami, where he outlasted Jan-Lennard Struff 6-3, 3-6, 6-3. The 18-year-old is the youngest American to win an ATP Masters 1000 match since Fritz in 2016. Blanch will next meet Doha finalist and former World No. 14 Arthur Fils.