Casper Ruud Survives the Elements and Karen Khachanov To Advance To Semifinals Of Italian Open
There are certain players who look comfortable on clay, and then there’s Casper Ruud, who walks onto the dirt like a guy returning to his favorite neighborhood restaurant where everybody already knows his order.
On Wednesday in Rome, Ruud didn’t just beat Karen Khachanov. He spent stretches of the match making one of the ATP Tour’s biggest hitters look like he accidentally wandered into the wrong weight class. And in classic Rome fashion, because apparently the tennis gods enjoy drama almost as much as Italian crowds do, rain interrupted the quarterfinal midway through. Still, the weather delay couldn’t cool off Ruud.
The Norwegian rolled through the opening set 6-1 before eventually closing out the victory in three sets, continuing what’s becoming one of the sneakiest, dangerous clay-court runs of the season. Reddit tennis fans were already joking about “Ruud Nation” marching through Rome like a medieval army, and honestly? That description didn’t feel far off.
Ruud Looked Like a Man Late For Dinner
From the opening game, Ruud played with the urgency of a guy trying to beat Roman traffic. His forehand had that heavy clay-court kick that forces opponents farther and farther behind the baseline until they practically need GPS coordinates to find the court again. Khachanov, usually so solid when dictating rallies, spent most of the first set reacting instead of attacking.
That is the sneaky thing about him when he’s rolling. Nothing looks chaotic. There’s no theatrical screaming. No racket twirls. No “look-at-me” energy. He just keeps drilling deep forehands until opponents slowly begin questioning their life choices.
Even before facing Khachanov, Ruud had already bulldozed through Rome with authority, including a straight-sets demolition of hometown favorite Lorenzo Musetti. The Foro Italico crowd arrived hoping for fireworks from the Italian star and instead watched Ruud calmly put on a clay-court clinic.
Rome Has Become Ruud Territory
For years, critics have treated Ruud like tennis’s permanent “very good player.” Dangerous, consistent, respectable, but rarely the headline act. That is changing again on clay. He has quietly built one of the strongest resumes on this surface over the last several seasons, and Rome keeps bringing out his best tennis. He entered this week chasing his fourth semifinal appearance in the Italian capital. That is not accidental.
Clay rewards patience, conditioning, and emotional control. Ruud has all three in abundance. He doesn’t panic when rallies hit 15 shots. He doesn’t suddenly start swinging for winners from the parking lot. He trusts the grind. On clay, that mindset becomes exhausting for opponents.
Ruud Is Creeping Back Into the Big Conversation
A few months ago, Ruud drifting outside the Top 20 felt strange considering how reliable he has been during the clay swing throughout his career. Now, Rome feels like another reminder that writing him off on this surface is usually a mistake.
The French Open is lurking around the corner, and players notice these things. They notice who’s striking the ball cleanly. They notice who’s moving confidently. They notice who suddenly starts looking impossible to hit through. Right now, he checks every one of those boxes.
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