Roger Federer reveals that he will make his latest comeback at next month’s Geneva Open

Roger Federer reveals that he will make his latest comeback next month as he heads to Geneva before returning to the delayed French Open ahead of Wimbledon

  • Roger Federer played at Qatar open last month before retreating into practice
  • Stefanos Tsitsipas beat Andrey Rublev 6-3, 6-3 to win the Monte-Carlo masters
  • Tsitsipas has established himself for a genuine contender at the French open

Roger Federer has revealed that his latest comeback will begin on May 16 and that he will be returning to the delayed French Open ahead of Wimbledon.

He will return at the relatively low-key Geneva Open to play one warm-up event before Roland Garros prior to making what could be a fairly quick transition to the grass courts.

The reality is that Federer, who played in Qatar last month before retreating to practice, is unlikely to be as much of a factor in Paris as Stefanos Tsitsipas.

Roger Federer has revealed that he will return to action at the Geneva Open next month

Stefanos Tsitsipas beat Andrey Rublev in straight sets in the final of the Monte-Carlo Masters

Stefanos Tsitsipas beat Andrey Rublev in straight sets in the final of the Monte-Carlo Masters

The 22 year-old Greek underlined his outstanding potential yesterday by winning the Monte Carlo Open with a 6-3 6-3 victory over Russia’s Andrey Rublev in tennis’s latest behind closed doors final.

For Tsitsipas it was a triumph made more emotional by the fact that his mother Julia won a major international junior event at the same venue almost exactly forty years ago.

He has established himself as a genuine contender for Roland Garros by becoming the highest point scorer on the ATP Tour based on this season’s results alone. Both Rafael Nadal and Novak Djokovic look to have a lot of ground to make up on the evidence of the past week, but they may well do so when it matters.

Tsitsipas has established himself as a genuine contender for this years French open

Tsitsipas has established himself as a genuine contender for this years French open 

Dan Evans’s surprise efforts at one of the game’s most historic venues see him in eleventh place for the 2021 season, having lost to Tsitsipas in Saturday’s semi-final.

Not only that, but he and Neal Skupski are in fifth position among the world’s leading pairings after making yesterday’s doubles final.

In an unexpected turn of events Evans and the Liverpudlian have reached the final of both events they have played together, each at Masters level. Yesterday they lost to the same opposition as in Miami, going down 6-3 4-6 10-7 to Croatia’s Mate Pavic and Nikola Mektic.