



AUGUSTA, GEORGIA - APRIL 10: Scottie Scheffler of the United States walks to the fifth…
Formula One’s governing body has thrown fresh light on the contribution of an unpaid army of motorsport volunteers underpinning the glamorous cash-rich world of millionaire drivers, luxury brands and A-list celebrities.
The International Automobile Federation (FIA) published a report on Friday, with data provided by race organisers, that it said captured accurately for the first time how much the safe and efficient staging of races relied on committed men and women offering their time for free.
To organise a single round of the 2025 F1 championship, it said, required an average of 838 trained motorsport volunteers — a ratio of roughly 42 for every F1 driver competing on track.
A minimum of 20,112 were needed to support the 24-race season, with each committing an average of 48 hours over the course of a three-day race weekend.
That added up to a total of 965,376 hours over a season, although the report warned this was “almost certainly an underestimation of the total volunteer commitment…as it only captures hours spent ‘on duty’ across the race weekend” and not preparatory training.
The list of volunteer positions includes flag marshals, observers, incident officers and extrication teams who spring into action when things go wrong on track, as well as stewards.
ALSO READ | Verstappen’s race engineer Lambiase to leave Red Bull for McLaren at end of the season
The report, based on research by the FIA University, found also that volunteers contributed an estimated 13.2 million euros (USD 15.5 million) worth of support annually — a significant amount but still a fraction of the salaries of drivers like Max Verstappen, Lewis Hamilton and Lando Norris. According to www.forbes.com, Verstappen earned USD 76 million in 2025 from salary and endorsements. The Ferrari team is worth more than USD 6 billion while F1 owners Liberty Media reported revenue of USD 3.87 billion last year.
The FIA said training and development programmes provided by it and member clubs at every grand prix equated to more than 11 million euros of investment.
“The FIA Formula One World Championship relies on volunteers, they are the backbone of our sport – without them we simply could not go racing,” said FIA President Mohammed Ben Sulayem.
“They ensure our competitions are safe and fair. They act with professionalism and pride, and they support drivers, teams and fans.”
The report said that on average the workload of volunteers had increased by 20 per cent in the past five years and 65 per cent either took annual or unpaid leave in order to be present.
Two out of three volunteers supporting F1 events had done so for at least five years. In just under a third of cases the involvement extended to more than 10 years.
“There is no comparable sport in the world that requires the same level of technical scrutiny or number of professionally qualified volunteers,” the report said.
The next closest is the World Rally Championship, which requires more volunteers per event but has far fewer rounds and more competitors.
The report recommended investment in a dedicated Centre of Excellence with a series of full-time paid roles that would also incentivise individuals to advance through the ranks.
Published on Apr 10, 2026
Formula One’s governing body has thrown fresh light on the contribution of an unpaid army of motorsport volunteers underpinning the glamorous cash-rich world of millionaire drivers, luxury brands and A-list celebrities.
The International Automobile Federation (FIA) published a report on Friday, with data provided by race organisers, that it said captured accurately for the first time how much the safe and efficient staging of races relied on committed men and women offering their time for free.
To organise a single round of the 2025 F1 championship, it said, required an average of 838 trained motorsport volunteers — a ratio of roughly 42 for every F1 driver competing on track.
A minimum of 20,112 were needed to support the 24-race season, with each committing an average of 48 hours over the course of a three-day race weekend.
That added up to a total of 965,376 hours over a season, although the report warned this was “almost certainly an underestimation of the total volunteer commitment…as it only captures hours spent ‘on duty’ across the race weekend” and not preparatory training.
The list of volunteer positions includes flag marshals, observers, incident officers and extrication teams who spring into action when things go wrong on track, as well as stewards.
ALSO READ | Verstappen’s race engineer Lambiase to leave Red Bull for McLaren at end of the season
The report, based on research by the FIA University, found also that volunteers contributed an estimated 13.2 million euros (USD 15.5 million) worth of support annually — a significant amount but still a fraction of the salaries of drivers like Max Verstappen, Lewis Hamilton and Lando Norris. According to www.forbes.com, Verstappen earned USD 76 million in 2025 from salary and endorsements. The Ferrari team is worth more than USD 6 billion while F1 owners Liberty Media reported revenue of USD 3.87 billion last year.
The FIA said training and development programmes provided by it and member clubs at every grand prix equated to more than 11 million euros of investment.
“The FIA Formula One World Championship relies on volunteers, they are the backbone of our sport – without them we simply could not go racing,” said FIA President Mohammed Ben Sulayem.
“They ensure our competitions are safe and fair. They act with professionalism and pride, and they support drivers, teams and fans.”
The report said that on average the workload of volunteers had increased by 20 per cent in the past five years and 65 per cent either took annual or unpaid leave in order to be present.
Two out of three volunteers supporting F1 events had done so for at least five years. In just under a third of cases the involvement extended to more than 10 years.
“There is no comparable sport in the world that requires the same level of technical scrutiny or number of professionally qualified volunteers,” the report said.
The next closest is the World Rally Championship, which requires more volunteers per event but has far fewer rounds and more competitors.
The report recommended investment in a dedicated Centre of Excellence with a series of full-time paid roles that would also incentivise individuals to advance through the ranks.
Published on Apr 10, 2026
Formula One’s governing body has thrown fresh light on the contribution of an unpaid army…
Apr 9, 2026; Elmont, New York, USA; New York Islanders center Brayden Schenn (10) celebrates with teammates after scoring a goal in the first period against the Toronto Maple Leafs at UBS Arena. Mandatory Credit: Wendell Cruz-Imagn Images For the New York Islanders, the equation is simple: If they don’t win an unofficial playoff game against the Ottawa Senators on Saturday, they almost certainly won’t participate in a true playoff game next week.
Both clubs will continue their pursuit of a postseason berth when New York hosts Ottawa in a pivotal Eastern Conference matinee in Elmont, N.Y.
Both teams were off Friday after earning victories at home Thursday. The Islanders won Peter DeBoer’s debut as head coach by beating the Toronto Maple Leafs 5-3, while the Senators routed the Florida Panthers 5-1.
The win by the Senators (42-27-10, 94 points) didn’t help the Islanders (43-31-5, 91 points) as they try to scramble back into the postseason picture after spending most of the season entrenched in a playoff spot.
While the Islanders remained three points behind the Senators in the race for the second and final wild-card spot, they inched within one point of Philadelphia (40-27-12, 92 points) for third place in the Metropolitan Division after the Flyers fell 6-3 Thursday to the Detroit Red Wings.
The Islanders and Red Wings (41-29-9, 91 points) are one point ahead of the Columbus Blue Jackets (39-28-12, 90 points) and two points ahead of the Washington Capitals (40-30-9, 89 points).
All six teams have three games left and are in action Saturday.
The win Thursday snapped a season-high four-game losing streak for the Islanders, who fired Patrick Roy as head coach Sunday morning, hours after a 4-3 loss to the Carolina Hurricanes.
New York never trailed Thursday, when Brayden Schenn and Jean-Gabriel Pageau scored within the first five minutes. Steven Lorentz and Easton Cowan scored within a span of a little more than seven minutes bridging the first two periods before Matthew Schaeffer collected the go-ahead goal at 9:39 of the second for the Islanders, who outshot the Maple Leafs 44-16.
“There was just a lot of really good stuff,” DeBoer said. “We’ve been talking all week about playoff habits. You have to have them this time of year to give yourself a chance to get in the playoffs.”
The Senators’ third straight win continued a strong second-half surge for Ottawa, which is trying to reach the playoffs in consecutive seasons for the first time since 2012-13.
The Senators have gone 19-6-3 since Jan. 25, a span in which they’ve authored four winning streaks of at least three games. Ottawa has dropped consecutive games just once in that stretch.
Ottawa, which began its current winning streak by beating the playoff-bound Hurricanes and Tampa Bay Lightning, took control quickly Thursday against the Panthers, who won the last two Stanley Cups but have been eliminated from playoff contention.
Drake Batherson, Fabian Zetterlund and Artem Zub scored within the first 23:03 for the Senators, who haven’t trailed since the first period of Sunday’s 5-3 win over the Hurricanes.
“Nice to win, but also playing the way we want to play,” said Senators defenseman Jake Sanderson, who had a pair of assists Thursday. “Obviously want to get points, but going down the stretch, we want to do it the right way.”
–Field Level Media
Apr 9, 2026; Elmont, New York, USA; New York Islanders center Brayden Schenn (10) celebrates with teammates after scoring a goal in the first period against the Toronto Maple Leafs at UBS Arena. Mandatory Credit: Wendell Cruz-Imagn Images For the New York Islanders, the equation is simple: If they don’t win an unofficial playoff game against the Ottawa Senators on Saturday, they almost certainly won’t participate in a true playoff game next week.
Both clubs will continue their pursuit of a postseason berth when New York hosts Ottawa in a pivotal Eastern Conference matinee in Elmont, N.Y.
Both teams were off Friday after earning victories at home Thursday. The Islanders won Peter DeBoer’s debut as head coach by beating the Toronto Maple Leafs 5-3, while the Senators routed the Florida Panthers 5-1.
The win by the Senators (42-27-10, 94 points) didn’t help the Islanders (43-31-5, 91 points) as they try to scramble back into the postseason picture after spending most of the season entrenched in a playoff spot.
While the Islanders remained three points behind the Senators in the race for the second and final wild-card spot, they inched within one point of Philadelphia (40-27-12, 92 points) for third place in the Metropolitan Division after the Flyers fell 6-3 Thursday to the Detroit Red Wings.
The Islanders and Red Wings (41-29-9, 91 points) are one point ahead of the Columbus Blue Jackets (39-28-12, 90 points) and two points ahead of the Washington Capitals (40-30-9, 89 points).
All six teams have three games left and are in action Saturday.
The win Thursday snapped a season-high four-game losing streak for the Islanders, who fired Patrick Roy as head coach Sunday morning, hours after a 4-3 loss to the Carolina Hurricanes.
New York never trailed Thursday, when Brayden Schenn and Jean-Gabriel Pageau scored within the first five minutes. Steven Lorentz and Easton Cowan scored within a span of a little more than seven minutes bridging the first two periods before Matthew Schaeffer collected the go-ahead goal at 9:39 of the second for the Islanders, who outshot the Maple Leafs 44-16.
“There was just a lot of really good stuff,” DeBoer said. “We’ve been talking all week about playoff habits. You have to have them this time of year to give yourself a chance to get in the playoffs.”
The Senators’ third straight win continued a strong second-half surge for Ottawa, which is trying to reach the playoffs in consecutive seasons for the first time since 2012-13.
The Senators have gone 19-6-3 since Jan. 25, a span in which they’ve authored four winning streaks of at least three games. Ottawa has dropped consecutive games just once in that stretch.
Ottawa, which began its current winning streak by beating the playoff-bound Hurricanes and Tampa Bay Lightning, took control quickly Thursday against the Panthers, who won the last two Stanley Cups but have been eliminated from playoff contention.
Drake Batherson, Fabian Zetterlund and Artem Zub scored within the first 23:03 for the Senators, who haven’t trailed since the first period of Sunday’s 5-3 win over the Hurricanes.
“Nice to win, but also playing the way we want to play,” said Senators defenseman Jake Sanderson, who had a pair of assists Thursday. “Obviously want to get points, but going down the stretch, we want to do it the right way.”
–Field Level Media
Apr 9, 2026; Elmont, New York, USA; New York Islanders center Brayden Schenn (10) celebrates…
When you hear the term “classic rock,” you might think of a breezy Fleetwood Mac…
As the core player for the Tempo, Mabrey was eligible for $1.4 million this year, but likely negotiated a 2-year contract at the regular max of $1.19 million in year one with a slight bump up in 2027. The Tempo chose her from the Connecticut Sun in the expansion draft with the intention to core her.
Sykes comes to Toronto by way of Seattle, where she was traded midseason in 2025. She’s a strong two-way shooting guard, a WNBA All-Star, and a 4x WNBA All-Defense selection. Her veteran presence was significant on the Washington Mystics at the beginning of last season, which is likely a big reason Toronto had sought her out.
For a team that started from zero on a compact timeline, the Tempo have been taking big swings. The idea of coming out competitively in year one is an intriguing experiment for an expansion franchise, something Golden State did well in 2o25. Right now, the Tempo have the 11th-best title odds in the WNBA in 2026, at +150,000, according to our friends at FanDuel, but they were always unlikely to win a championship in year one. These signings are about setting a standard of professionalism for a new franchise, and growing a culture to build upon.
Bringing in Sykes as a veteran leader is definitely a good move to build culture on a new team, and pairing her with an instant fan-fav like Mabrey is just fun.
Right now, the Tempo’s roster is still very small and very guard-heavy. The idea of spending a max contract on Sykes when you possibly could have spent that money on a solid frontcourt player raises eyebrows and creates a little bit of risk, but it’s still early in free agency. There is still a good chunk of money and lots of good players left on the market for Toronto to get the depth they need. Overall, the Sykes move is very fun for the new Toronto team, and both of these players should quickly become fan favorites in the new WNBA city.
As the core player for the Tempo, Mabrey was eligible for $1.4 million this year, but likely negotiated a 2-year contract at the regular max of $1.19 million in year one with a slight bump up in 2027. The Tempo chose her from the Connecticut Sun in the expansion draft with the intention to core her.
Sykes comes to Toronto by way of Seattle, where she was traded midseason in 2025. She’s a strong two-way shooting guard, a WNBA All-Star, and a 4x WNBA All-Defense selection. Her veteran presence was significant on the Washington Mystics at the beginning of last season, which is likely a big reason Toronto had sought her out.
For a team that started from zero on a compact timeline, the Tempo have been taking big swings. The idea of coming out competitively in year one is an intriguing experiment for an expansion franchise, something Golden State did well in 2o25. Right now, the Tempo have the 11th-best title odds in the WNBA in 2026, at +150,000, according to our friends at FanDuel, but they were always unlikely to win a championship in year one. These signings are about setting a standard of professionalism for a new franchise, and growing a culture to build upon.
Bringing in Sykes as a veteran leader is definitely a good move to build culture on a new team, and pairing her with an instant fan-fav like Mabrey is just fun.
Right now, the Tempo’s roster is still very small and very guard-heavy. The idea of spending a max contract on Sykes when you possibly could have spent that money on a solid frontcourt player raises eyebrows and creates a little bit of risk, but it’s still early in free agency. There is still a good chunk of money and lots of good players left on the market for Toronto to get the depth they need. Overall, the Sykes move is very fun for the new Toronto team, and both of these players should quickly become fan favorites in the new WNBA city.
The Toronto Tempo are coming out swinging in their very first WNBA free agency, signing the WNBA’s first million-dollar backcourt. Per ESPN, the Tempo are signing Marina Mabrey (who they cored this week) as well as Brittney Sykes to 2-year, max contracts.
As the core player for the Tempo, Mabrey was eligible for $1.4 million this year, but likely negotiated a 2-year contract at the regular max of $1.19 million in year one with a slight bump up in 2027. The Tempo chose her from the Connecticut Sun in the expansion draft with the intention to core her.
Sykes comes to Toronto by way of Seattle, where she was traded midseason in 2025. She’s a strong two-way shooting guard, a WNBA All-Star, and a 4x WNBA All-Defense selection. Her veteran presence was significant on the Washington Mystics at the beginning of last season, which is likely a big reason Toronto had sought her out.
For a team that started from zero on a compact timeline, the Tempo have been taking big swings. The idea of coming out competitively in year one is an intriguing experiment for an expansion franchise, something Golden State did well in 2o25. Right now, the Tempo have the 11th-best title odds in the WNBA in 2026, at +150,000, according to our friends at FanDuel, but they were always unlikely to win a championship in year one. These signings are about setting a standard of professionalism for a new franchise, and growing a culture to build upon.
Bringing in Sykes as a veteran leader is definitely a good move to build culture on a new team, and pairing her with an instant fan-fav like Mabrey is just fun.
Right now, the Tempo’s roster is still very small and very guard-heavy. The idea of spending a max contract on Sykes when you possibly could have spent that money on a solid frontcourt player raises eyebrows and creates a little bit of risk, but it’s still early in free agency. There is still a good chunk of money and lots of good players left on the market for Toronto to get the depth they need. Overall, the Sykes move is very fun for the new Toronto team, and both of these players should quickly become fan favorites in the new WNBA city.
The Toronto Tempo are coming out swinging in their very first WNBA free agency, signing…
Rajasthan Royals added 97 runs in the PowerPlay against Royal Challengers Bengaluru on Friday to register its highest PowerPlay total in the IPL.
The side’s previous best came last season against Punjab Kings when it posted 89 for one. RR’s score against RCB on Friday was also the highest during the field restrictions this season.
On Friday, Royals’ charge was led by Vaibhav Suryavanshi, who struck a 15-ball half century and took on RCB’s pacers Josh Hazlewood and Bhuvneshwar Kumar. Dhruv Jurel also chipped in with 27 runs off 10 balls at the top after Yashasvi Jaiswal’s early fall.
Published on Apr 10, 2026
Rajasthan Royals added 97 runs in the PowerPlay against Royal Challengers Bengaluru on Friday to register its highest PowerPlay total in the IPL.
The side’s previous best came last season against Punjab Kings when it posted 89 for one. RR’s score against RCB on Friday was also the highest during the field restrictions this season.
On Friday, Royals’ charge was led by Vaibhav Suryavanshi, who struck a 15-ball half century and took on RCB’s pacers Josh Hazlewood and Bhuvneshwar Kumar. Dhruv Jurel also chipped in with 27 runs off 10 balls at the top after Yashasvi Jaiswal’s early fall.
Published on Apr 10, 2026
Rajasthan Royals added 97 runs in the PowerPlay against Royal Challengers Bengaluru on Friday to…
Ether treasury company Bitmine Immersion Technologies has started trading on the New York Stock Exchange…
Buddy the Elf stares forward in disbelief, eyes wide and expression unflinching, as he delivers…
Apr 4, 2026; Toronto, Ontario, CAN; Toronto FC forward Josh Sargent (9) celebrates scoring against the Colorado Rapids during the second half at BMO Field. Mandatory Credit: Kevin Sousa-Imagn Images In a short period of time, Josh Sargent has lived up to the hype that came with his transfer to Toronto FC.
Sargent, 26, leads Toronto (3-2-1, 10 points) into a home match against FC Cincinnati (2-4-0, 6 points) on Saturday afternoon.
Sargent’s header in the 85th minute served as the match winner in Toronto’s 3-2 comeback win against the Colorado Rapids last Saturday. It earned him recognition on the MLS Team of the Matchday. Toronto is unbeaten in four straight matches (3-0-1).
While he has only played in three matches, Sargent has a goal and an assist.
Sargent was acquired in February from English Championship club Norwich City for a $22 million transfer fee, that can be worth up to $26 million — a top-five transfer fee paid by an MLS team. Sargent inked a contract through the 2030-31 MLS campaign that already has paid dividends.
“Josh is good at everything you need a forward to be good at,” Toronto coach Robin Fraser said. “We see bits and pieces of it every time we see him play. And then we see more of it when we see more minutes. His whole (style) of play is excellent. He’s very tidy in tight spaces. He also has really good timing when it comes time to get forward and make decisions about how he can get himself in front of the goal.”
Toronto announced on Friday that midfielder Djordje Mihailovic is expected to be sidelined approximately eight weeks after being diagnosed with a fractured pelvis. He has one goal and two assists in five matches (four starts) this season.
FC Cincinnati coach Pat Noonan also noted Sargent has an extensive skill set.
“I think you see a player that will be very impactful on how they play moving forward,” Noonan said. “He’s a goal scorer and a team player and is just getting started. Hopefully we can have some solutions to limiting his impact.”
Cincinnati dropped a 4-2 match to the New York Red Bulls last Saturday and has been outscored 15-9 this season.
Because it is usually in a 5-2-1-2 formation, Cincinnati’s move to an aggressive 4-3-3 lineup against New York was a significant change. Yet, Noonan shook off the strategic shift.
“We analyze our current group and what is working and what is not,” Noonan said. “Our opponent also factors in. We don’t rule out anything when it comes to preparation.”
Toronto earned a 1-0 win at Cincinnati on March 8 on a Daniel Salloi goal in the 86th minute.
–Field Level Media
Apr 4, 2026; Toronto, Ontario, CAN; Toronto FC forward Josh Sargent (9) celebrates scoring against the Colorado Rapids during the second half at BMO Field. Mandatory Credit: Kevin Sousa-Imagn Images In a short period of time, Josh Sargent has lived up to the hype that came with his transfer to Toronto FC.
Sargent, 26, leads Toronto (3-2-1, 10 points) into a home match against FC Cincinnati (2-4-0, 6 points) on Saturday afternoon.
Sargent’s header in the 85th minute served as the match winner in Toronto’s 3-2 comeback win against the Colorado Rapids last Saturday. It earned him recognition on the MLS Team of the Matchday. Toronto is unbeaten in four straight matches (3-0-1).
While he has only played in three matches, Sargent has a goal and an assist.
Sargent was acquired in February from English Championship club Norwich City for a $22 million transfer fee, that can be worth up to $26 million — a top-five transfer fee paid by an MLS team. Sargent inked a contract through the 2030-31 MLS campaign that already has paid dividends.
“Josh is good at everything you need a forward to be good at,” Toronto coach Robin Fraser said. “We see bits and pieces of it every time we see him play. And then we see more of it when we see more minutes. His whole (style) of play is excellent. He’s very tidy in tight spaces. He also has really good timing when it comes time to get forward and make decisions about how he can get himself in front of the goal.”
Toronto announced on Friday that midfielder Djordje Mihailovic is expected to be sidelined approximately eight weeks after being diagnosed with a fractured pelvis. He has one goal and two assists in five matches (four starts) this season.
FC Cincinnati coach Pat Noonan also noted Sargent has an extensive skill set.
“I think you see a player that will be very impactful on how they play moving forward,” Noonan said. “He’s a goal scorer and a team player and is just getting started. Hopefully we can have some solutions to limiting his impact.”
Cincinnati dropped a 4-2 match to the New York Red Bulls last Saturday and has been outscored 15-9 this season.
Because it is usually in a 5-2-1-2 formation, Cincinnati’s move to an aggressive 4-3-3 lineup against New York was a significant change. Yet, Noonan shook off the strategic shift.
“We analyze our current group and what is working and what is not,” Noonan said. “Our opponent also factors in. We don’t rule out anything when it comes to preparation.”
Toronto earned a 1-0 win at Cincinnati on March 8 on a Daniel Salloi goal in the 86th minute.
–Field Level Media
Apr 4, 2026; Toronto, Ontario, CAN; Toronto FC forward Josh Sargent (9) celebrates scoring against…
Top-ranked Carlos Alcaraz and his closest rival Jannik Sinner both cruised into the semifinals of the Monte Carlo Masters with straight-sets wins on Friday.
Sinner extended his winning run at Masters 1000 events to 20 matches as he brushed aside Felix Auger-Aliassime 6-3, 6-4 in one hour 32 minutes.
Alcaraz was next on the centre court and extended his clay-court run of victories to 16 as he crushed Alexander Bublik 6-3, 6-0 in one hour three minutes.
The top two had both suffered second-set blips the day before when Sinner, who said later his energy level was not right had his record streak of 36 consecutive sets won in Masters tournaments snapped by Tomas Machac in the last 16.
“I feel like it was a step forwards today,” said the Italian after beating Canadian Auger-Aliassime.
“It was a very tough match. I knew I had to get better in certain areas. The serve is not there yet, where I would love it (to be), but all things considered I’m very happy.
“But in any case, very happy to be back in the semis.”
Sinner has never won one of the elite clay tournaments but will be a strong favourite when he plays Alexander Zverev after winning their last seven meetings.
The world number two, who completed the ‘Sunshine double’ with wins at Indian Wells and the Miami Open, is still on track for a possible first clash of the year with Alcaraz in the final.
Sinner dropped just seven points on serve in a dominant opening set which he took courtesy of a break in the sixth game.
The four-time Grand Slam champion also powered through the second set, wrapping up his fifth consecutive win over seventh-ranked Auger-Aliassime.
Alcaraz, playing Bublik for the first time, broke in the opening game and had four break point in the third game but could not take any.
Bublik broke back in the fourth game and led 3-2, but Alcaraz won the next 10 games as he raced to victory.
“I started the match pretty well,” Alcaraz said.
“I had points to be two breaks up and didn’t make it and then I lost a bit of the feeling on the ball.
“I had to run side to side a lot, had to defend and then a few games gave me a lot of confidence in the match. I was playing aggressively and I played a great and solid match against a player that you don’t know what they will produce next.”
Alacarz will face the winner of Friday’s closing match between Alex de Minaur and Valentin Vacherot.
World number three Zverev sealed a battling 7-5, 6-7 (3/7), 6-3 victory over Brazilian teenager Joao Fonseca to reach the semi-finals in Monaco for the third time.
The German could complete a career sweep of the clay-court Masters 1000 events. He has won the Italian Open and Madrid Open twice each.
Big-hitting 19-year-old Fonseca was playing his first Masters quarter-final but pushed his opponent.
Zverev broke in the 11th game and then served out the opening set to love, before breaking again at the start of the second.
Fonseca reeled off four straight games from 3-1 down to tee up the chance to serve for the set, but he failed to take that opportunity.
The world number 40 found his rhythm in the tie-break with a string of magnificent groundstrokes to force a decider.
But Fonseca could not maintain that level as Zverev improved.
The 28-year-old broke in the sixth game and served out victory, reaching his third straight Masters 1000 semi-final this year.
Published on Apr 10, 2026
Top-ranked Carlos Alcaraz and his closest rival Jannik Sinner both cruised into the semifinals of the Monte Carlo Masters with straight-sets wins on Friday.
Sinner extended his winning run at Masters 1000 events to 20 matches as he brushed aside Felix Auger-Aliassime 6-3, 6-4 in one hour 32 minutes.
Alcaraz was next on the centre court and extended his clay-court run of victories to 16 as he crushed Alexander Bublik 6-3, 6-0 in one hour three minutes.
The top two had both suffered second-set blips the day before when Sinner, who said later his energy level was not right had his record streak of 36 consecutive sets won in Masters tournaments snapped by Tomas Machac in the last 16.
“I feel like it was a step forwards today,” said the Italian after beating Canadian Auger-Aliassime.
“It was a very tough match. I knew I had to get better in certain areas. The serve is not there yet, where I would love it (to be), but all things considered I’m very happy.
“But in any case, very happy to be back in the semis.”
Sinner has never won one of the elite clay tournaments but will be a strong favourite when he plays Alexander Zverev after winning their last seven meetings.
The world number two, who completed the ‘Sunshine double’ with wins at Indian Wells and the Miami Open, is still on track for a possible first clash of the year with Alcaraz in the final.
Sinner dropped just seven points on serve in a dominant opening set which he took courtesy of a break in the sixth game.
The four-time Grand Slam champion also powered through the second set, wrapping up his fifth consecutive win over seventh-ranked Auger-Aliassime.
Alcaraz, playing Bublik for the first time, broke in the opening game and had four break point in the third game but could not take any.
Bublik broke back in the fourth game and led 3-2, but Alcaraz won the next 10 games as he raced to victory.
“I started the match pretty well,” Alcaraz said.
“I had points to be two breaks up and didn’t make it and then I lost a bit of the feeling on the ball.
“I had to run side to side a lot, had to defend and then a few games gave me a lot of confidence in the match. I was playing aggressively and I played a great and solid match against a player that you don’t know what they will produce next.”
Alacarz will face the winner of Friday’s closing match between Alex de Minaur and Valentin Vacherot.
World number three Zverev sealed a battling 7-5, 6-7 (3/7), 6-3 victory over Brazilian teenager Joao Fonseca to reach the semi-finals in Monaco for the third time.
The German could complete a career sweep of the clay-court Masters 1000 events. He has won the Italian Open and Madrid Open twice each.
Big-hitting 19-year-old Fonseca was playing his first Masters quarter-final but pushed his opponent.
Zverev broke in the 11th game and then served out the opening set to love, before breaking again at the start of the second.
Fonseca reeled off four straight games from 3-1 down to tee up the chance to serve for the set, but he failed to take that opportunity.
The world number 40 found his rhythm in the tie-break with a string of magnificent groundstrokes to force a decider.
But Fonseca could not maintain that level as Zverev improved.
The 28-year-old broke in the sixth game and served out victory, reaching his third straight Masters 1000 semi-final this year.
Published on Apr 10, 2026
Top-ranked Carlos Alcaraz and his closest rival Jannik Sinner both cruised into the semifinals of…