Taylor Fritz Outlasts Lorenzo Musetti In Group Stage Of Nitto ATP Finals
In a sport where the spotlight often feels like a heat lamp, Taylor Fritz just served up a stone-cold performance to kick off his ATP Finals campaign. Facing Lorenzo Musetti in front of a rowdy Turin crowd that was clearly pulling for their home-country hero, Fritz didn’t just win; he put on a serving clinic.
The final score read 6-3, 6-4, but that doesn’t tell the whole story. This was less of a tennis match and more of a public execution by a thousand paper cuts, or in this case, a thousand serves. After a slightly wobbly start where Musetti had a few chances to break, Fritz decided he’d had enough of the drama. He flipped a switch, and suddenly, Musetti couldn’t get a read on his serve if he had a GPS tracker on the ball.
Fritz Finds His Groove On Serve
Let’s be real: Musetti wasn’t exactly fresh as a daisy. He only punched his ticket to this shindig on Sunday after Novak Djokovic, fresh off of schooling him in the Athens Open final, decided to take a pass. Showing up to the big dance as an alternate is tough, and it looked like the emotional and physical toll of the previous week caught up to him. Musetti battled, forcing seven of his nine service games to deuce, but he just couldn’t land the knockout blow when he had the chance.
Fritz, on the other hand, grew into the match like a seasoned pro. The 28-year-old American admitted to having some early jitters, which is understandable. But once he settled down, he was lights out. In the second set, he lost a grand total of three points on his serve. Two of those came in the final game, probably just to make it look like he was human. It was the kind of serving masterclass that makes opponents want to throw their racquet into the cheap seats.
“I was a little shaky at the start,” Fritz said. “I felt I was able to loosen up, and I just started playing a lot better.”
It was a dominant display that sent a clear message to the rest of the field: Fritz is here to do more than just participate. He was the runner-up last year, and he looks hungry for the main course this time around.
With this win, Fritz has fired the opening salvo in what promises to be a thrilling ATP Finals. He’s shown he can handle the pressure, the crowd, and a talented opponent without breaking a sweat. If his serve stays this hot, the rest of the competition better bring their fire extinguishers.
