Casper Ruud Dominates Lorenzo Musetti To Advance To Quarterfinals Of Italian Open
There are statement wins, and then there are “everybody in the locker room suddenly looks up from their pasta” wins. On Tuesday in Rome, Casper Ruud delivered the latter.
Ruud bulldozed Lorenzo Musetti in straight sets to punch his ticket to the Italian Open quarterfinals, and he did it with the kind of authority that made the Foro Italico crowd go from roaring to murmuring in about an hour and a half. One minute, Musetti was the hometown darling. Next, the Norweigan was turning the red clay into his own private construction site.
And now? A possible showdown with Jannik Sinner looms like a heavyweight title fight waiting backstage. The scary part for the rest of the ATP Tour is that Ruud suddenly looks comfortable again. Dangerous again. Like the guy who remembers he’s one of the best clay-court grinders on the planet.
Ruud Finally Looks Like Himself Again
For much of the past several months, Ruud has looked stuck somewhere between frustration and reinvention. His ranking slipped, his confidence wobbled, and the 2025 Madrid Open champion couldn’t quite recapture the rhythm that once made him a fixture in deep clay-court runs.
The slower surface rewards patience, heavy topspin, and the willingness to suffer through 20-shot rallies without blinking. That’s basically Ruud’s native language. Against Musetti, Ruud played with controlled aggression from the opening games. He dictated points early, attacked the Italian’s backhand, and never allowed the crowd to drag Musetti emotionally back into the match. Every time the Italian looked ready to ignite the stadium, he calmly poured water on the spark.
Musetti, one of the tour’s most stylish shot-makers, simply never found enough breathing room. The drop shots were there. The flair was there. But Ruud kept responding with depth, angles, and the kind of relentless consistency that can make opponents feel like they’re trying to hit winners through wet cement.
The Sinner Shadow Hanging Over Rome
Of course, in Italy right now, every road eventually leads to Sinner. The world No. 1 has turned 2026 into his personal highlight reel, already stacking Masters 1000 titles like somebody speed-running a tennis video game. Even he admitted recently that when Sinner and Carlos Alcaraz are at their peak, the rest of the tour can look “almost unreachable.” But Ruud also slipped in an important reminder: Sinner is still human.
The atmosphere in Rome is already simmering with expectation over a possible all-or-nothing clash involving Sinner. Italian fans want the fairytale ending. Ruud, meanwhile, looks fully prepared to play the villain role.
Why Ruud Could Be a Real Threat At the Italian Open
The biggest reason Ruud feels dangerous right now isn’t just the Musetti win. It’s how he won. No panic. No drama. No energy wasted. That matters late in tournaments when bodies start aching, and nerves begin chewing through players point by point. His game is built for attrition. Long rallies don’t scare him. They feed him.
And with several top contenders already bounced from Rome, the draw has opened wider than expected. So suddenly, the Norwegian who arrived in Rome searching for answers may now be carrying one giant question for the rest of the field: What happens if Ruud is heating up at exactly the right time?
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