Adrian Mannarino is the tour's great contrarian — a French left-hander who built a 20-year career on flat, low-bouncing groundstrokes in an era that rewarded everyone else's power. Born in 1988 in Soisy-sous-Montmorency, north of Paris, he turned pro in 2004 and came up the unglamorous way: years of Challenger grind rather than junior hype, learning to win on timing, disguise and a refusal to over-hit.
The style is the whole identity. Mannarino strings his rackets at famously low tension — among the lowest on tour — which lets him absorb incoming pace and redirect it with skidding, flat strokes that sit below the strike zone and hurry bigger hitters into errors. He stands close to the baseline, takes the ball early, and turns rallies into a problem of patience. It's a game that travels best on quick, low-bouncing surfaces, which is why grass and indoor hard courts have always been his happiest hunting grounds.
The career arc is one of slow accumulation. Mannarino cracked the top 100 in his mid-twenties, eventually reached a career-high inside the top 25, and collected ATP titles deep into his thirties — proof of how long a feel-based game can age. His best Grand Slam runs came at the majors that suit his flat ball, and he's been a recurring threat at events like Wimbledon and the indoor Paris Masters. Along the way he's troubled the sport's heavyweights, the kind of low-error puzzle that makes a returner like Daniil Medvedev or a shotmaker like Alexander Bublik work for every point.
Now ranked 46 and well into his late thirties, Mannarino is among the oldest men holding a spot in the top 50 — still a dangerous out-rounds floater, particularly once the tour reaches the grass and the fast indoor swing where his low ball does the most damage.