João Fonseca gave Brazilian fans plenty to cheer about Thursday at the Miami Open, rallying past Hungary’s Fabian Marozsan 6-4, 3-6, 6-2 in a first-round match that turned him into one of the central stories of the day. The 19-year-old Brazilian advanced into a high-profile second-round meeting with Carlos Alcaraz after a performance that mixed power, poise, and the kind of shot making that keeps drawing bigger crowds around him.
Fonseca’s win mattered on its own, but it also fit into a wider Latin American theme across Thursday’s packed schedule. The Miami Open was forced into an overloaded day after rain wiped out Wednesday’s play, and that created a busy slate filled with first-round action. In that setting, several Latin American players made their mark, with results that gave the men’s draw a clear South American presence.
Fonseca was the headline. ATP Tour coverage said he struck 12 aces and won 75 percent of his first-serve points against Marozsan, recovering well after dropping the second set and reasserting control in the third. The reward is immediate: a first career meeting with world No. 1 Alcaraz, one of the most watched early-round matchups now on the Miami schedule.
He was not alone. Argentina’s Camilo Ugo Carabelli pulled off one of the more notable comebacks of the day, defeating Giovanni Mpetshi Perricard 2-6, 6-3, 7-6(3). Argentina’s Mariano Navone also advanced, and Chile’s Alejandro Tabilo won his opening-round match as Latin American players pushed deeper into the draw. ESPN’s scoreboard and the ATP daily schedule also showed Peru’s Ignacio Buse advancing on the men’s side, adding to the regional momentum.
That gave Thursday a different feel than a typical early round. Miami is one of the rare events where Latin American players often compete in front of something close to a home crowd, and Fonseca in particular seemed to feed off that energy. His rise has already made him one of the most watched young players in the sport, and Thursday offered another reminder that he is no longer just a prospect.
He is becoming a real draw, especially in a city where Brazilian and Latin American support can shift the mood of an entire stadium. The ATP itself highlighted the atmosphere around his match and the stakes attached to it, with the winner earning a shot at Alcaraz.
There were losses for Latin American players as well, especially on the women’s side. Colombia’s Emiliana Arango fell 6-3, 4-6, 6-3 to Oksana Selekhmeteva, while Argentina’s Solana Sierra lost to Kamilla Rakhimova. Those results limited the regional push in the women’s draw, but they did little to change the broader impression of the day, which tilted toward the men’s breakthroughs.
For Brazil, the bigger takeaway is that Fonseca is carrying more than hype into the second round. He is carrying expectation. His next match against Alcaraz will be a much tougher test, but it also gives him another chance to show that his surge is real and that Latin American tennis has a rising figure capable of commanding the spotlight at one of the sport’s biggest events outside the Grand Slams.
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