The ATP Rankings This Week reflect a men’s tour in flux as March 28, 2026 opens the European clay swing. With Monte-Carlo days away, every point banked on hard courts now faces a surface shift that historically reshuffles the top 20.
Jannik Sinner holds world No. 1, a position he claimed in 2024. Carlos Alcaraz sits at No. 2. The gap between them fluctuates weekly and mirrors the competitive tension defining men’s tennis across two seasons. Alexander Zverev, Novak Djokovic, and Daniil Medvedev round out the current top five, though Djokovic’s clay schedule remains fluid given his selective 2026 calendar.
How the Current Standings Took Shape
ATP rankings run on a rolling 52-week points window. Results from the 2025 clay season are now expiring, creating genuine volatility at every tier. Players who performed well in Monte-Carlo, Madrid, and Rome last spring must defend those points or watch their position slide without stepping on court.
Sinner’s hard-court dominance through 2025 — anchored by his Australian Open title — built a cushion that even a modest clay campaign cannot fully erode. Alcaraz, the reigning Roland Garros champion, enters the swing as the man best placed to close the gap. He accumulated fewer points in the January-March hard-court window this year. His back-to-back Roland Garros titles in 2024 and 2025 will become his primary ranking weapon over the next eight weeks.
Zverev’s third-place standing looks structurally sound. His clay-court record over three seasons ranks among the best on tour outside the top two. Medvedev’s position faces more pressure — the Russian has shed ranking points during every clay swing for four consecutive seasons, a pattern unlikely to reverse on a surface that neutralizes his flat ball-striking.
Key Movers Below the Top Five
Taylor Fritz, Casper Ruud, Hubert Hurkacz, and Andrey Rublev all sit within reach of the top-six bracket. Each carries a distinct clay profile that will determine whether they advance or retreat over the coming weeks.
Casper Ruud presents the most compelling upward case. The Norwegian reached the Roland Garros final in both 2022 and 2023. His clay points from the 2025 spring season are expiring now, meaning he must perform at a similar level just to stay stationary. Taylor Fritz, by contrast, enters the clay swing ranked inside the top eight for the first time in his career — a milestone reflecting his hard-court consistency in 2025 and early 2026. Whether that form carries over to clay is the central question around his trajectory.
Hurkacz reached the Monte-Carlo semifinals in 2025, a result expiring this week that leaves his ranking exposed. Rublev showed genuine clay quality last spring — including a Madrid quarterfinal run — but enters the swing after a difficult hard-court stretch in early 2026.
What the Rankings Mean for Clay Draw Seedings
Current standings directly determine seedings at Monte-Carlo, Madrid, and Rome. A top-eight ranking earns a first-round bye and bracket separation from fellow seeds until the quarterfinals — a structural edge that compounds across a two-week clay swing.
For Sinner, the No. 1 seed at Monte-Carlo means he cannot face Alcaraz before a potential final. That bracket protection is historically worth an estimated 200-300 additional ranking points per event, accounting for rounds avoided against top-ten opponents. Alcaraz, seeded No. 2, receives identical protection from the opposite half. Barring injury or an extraordinary upset, the gap between the top two is unlikely to close sharply until Roland Garros, where the full 2,000 points are available.
Emma Raducanu’s WTA schedule was updated by Sky Sports on March 28, 2026, confirming active clay-court tournament planning for the spring. The British No. 1’s approach mirrors a broader trend among European players who are recalibrating spring schedules to maximize clay-court point accumulation rather than chasing late-March hard-court results.
Key Developments in the March 28 Cycle
- Sinner’s points total entering the clay swing is estimated above 10,000 — a figure with no comparable precedent in the post-Djokovic-peak era at this stage of a season.
- Alcaraz’s Roland Garros defending champion points (2,000) do not expire until June 2026, giving him a built-in floor even if early clay results disappoint.
- Djokovic’s selective 2026 schedule means his top-five ranking faces attrition risk if he bypasses Monte-Carlo and Madrid as he has in previous seasons.
- Fritz’s career-high top-eight position is the loftiest achieved by an American man since Andy Roddick’s sustained run in the mid-2000s.
- Sky Sports updated Raducanu’s ranking data on March 28, 2026, indicating confirmed spring clay-season tournament entries.
What Comes Next for the Ranking Race
Monte-Carlo opens the Masters 1000 clay sequence, followed by Madrid and Rome before Roland Garros in late May. A player who wins all three Masters events plus the French Open could accumulate 8,000 ranking points — enough to overturn almost any deficit outside the top two.
Lorenzo Musetti, Sebastian Korda, and Ben Shelton — all ranked between six and fifteen — carry sharply different clay profiles. Musetti, a natural clay-court operator with a one-handed backhand built for the surface, stands to gain the most from the swing. Shelton’s power game, devastating on hard courts, faces its annual test against heavy topspin and slower conditions. The surface will sort them quickly.
One analytical note: the 52-week rolling window means a single strong tournament can mask broader inconsistency. A player who wins Monte-Carlo but exits Madrid and Rome in early rounds may end the clay swing ranked lower than when he started — a paradox that raw points tables obscure but that weekly fluctuations expose clearly.
Who is currently ranked No. 1 in the ATP rankings this week?
Jannik Sinner of Italy holds the ATP world No. 1 position as of March 28, 2026. He claimed the top spot in 2024 after his Australian Open title and has maintained it through the hard-court season. His points total entering the clay swing is estimated above 10,000, providing a substantial buffer over No. 2 Carlos Alcaraz.
How are ATP ranking points calculated during the clay season?
ATP ranking points use a rolling 52-week window, so points earned at each tournament in 2025 expire when that same event is played in 2026. Masters 1000 clay events — Monte-Carlo, Madrid, and Rome — award 1,000 points to the winner. Roland Garros, the lone clay Grand Slam, awards 2,000 points to the champion, the maximum available at any single tournament on the calendar.
Which players are most likely to climb during the clay swing?
Casper Ruud and Lorenzo Musetti are structurally positioned to advance. Ruud has reached multiple Roland Garros finals and performs consistently on clay. Musetti possesses a one-handed backhand and heavy topspin forehand that suit the surface better than the flat-ball games defining most of his ranking peers in the six-to-fifteen corridor.
Does Emma Raducanu have a clay-court schedule in spring 2026?
Sky Sports confirmed on March 28, 2026 that Raducanu’s schedule and ranking data were actively updated, indicating confirmed spring clay entries. Raducanu, Britain’s top-ranked women’s player, has historically used the clay swing to build match fitness ahead of the grass-court season. She won the 2021 US Open on hard courts as an unseeded qualifier — a run that transformed her career trajectory.
What is the difference between ATP live rankings and official ATP rankings?
Official ATP rankings update each Monday, reflecting completed results through the prior week. Live rankings project standings in real time during active tournaments, incorporating results before an event concludes. The two figures can diverge sharply for players still competing deep in a draw — sometimes by hundreds of points — making live rankings a more accurate gauge of a player’s current standing mid-tournament.

