Frisco, Texas didn’t ease into the 2026 Nexo Dallas Open.
It exploded into it.
Under the bright indoor lights, Frances Tiafoe opened his campaign the hard way — by getting punched first, then answering with authority. The eighth seed dropped the opening set to fearless Frenchman Terence Atmane before flipping the match on its head, storming back for a 4-6, 6-2, 6-2 victory that reminded everyone why Tiafoe remains one of the most dangerous momentum players on the ATP Tour.

The first set was uncomfortable. Atmane, unburdened by expectations and swinging freely, took the ball early and disrupted Tiafoe’s rhythm with aggressive returns and sharp changes of direction. For stretches, the American found himself reacting rather than dictating, and Atmane made him pay with clean baseline hitting and confident holds.
But the match turned the moment Tiafoe settled.
From the opening games of the second set, his body language shifted — quicker feet, heavier forehands, louder engagement with the crowd. He began absorbing Atmane’s pace and redirecting it with depth, forcing the Frenchman to hit extra balls and defend on the run. The serve tightened. The return game sharpened. And suddenly, the contest was being played on Tiafoe’s terms.
The result was emphatic.
Tiafoe raced through the second set, breaking early and often, feeding off the energy of a home crowd that knows when its favorite has found his groove. By the time the third set arrived, the match had fully tilted. Atmane continued to fight, but the openings were gone. Tiafoe’s athleticism, variety, and willingness to attack the net closed the door with authority.
It wasn’t flashy dominance — it was controlled aggression.
And it mattered.
Dallas has always been a stage where American players thrive on momentum, and Tiafoe understands that better than most. His ability to weather early discomfort and elevate under pressure has defined his best runs, and this opener fit that script perfectly.
Now comes the real test.
Awaiting Tiafoe in the next round is Sebastian Korda — another American, another storyline, and another player trending upward. Korda advanced with a composed straight-sets victory over Michael Zheng, a win that also marked the 150th tour-level victory of his young but steadily maturing career.
If Tiafoe’s win was about grit, Korda’s was about precision.
The contrast sets up one of the most intriguing matchups of the early rounds: Tiafoe’s explosive athleticism and crowd-driven energy versus Korda’s clean ball-striking, timing, and calm under pressure. Both players are comfortable indoors. Both serve big. Both see Dallas as a genuine opportunity to build early-season momentum.
And neither will want to give an inch — especially not to a fellow American.
Beyond the immediate result, the matchup carries broader implications. With the U.S. men’s contingent deeper than ever, these head-to-head battles are becoming increasingly meaningful — not just for ranking points, but for pecking order, confidence, and visibility in marquee events.
For Tiafoe, the message from his opener was clear: he’s ready to grind when necessary, not just entertain. For Korda, the challenge will be withstanding that pressure and imposing his own tempo before the crowd fully tilts the arena.
Dallas has already delivered comebacks, statements, and rising tension — and this next clash feels like a pivot point in the draw.
Big serves.
Fast courts.
No hiding places.
If the opening round was the warm-up, Tiafoe vs. Korda is where the Dallas Open truly starts to catch fire.