Alejandro Davidovich Fokina — Player Bio

The Málaga maximalist with the tour's best drop shot and no trophy

Alejandro Davidovich Fokina is the most accomplished maiden in tennis — a top-25 fixture with the résumé of a champion and a trophy case that's still empty. Born and raised in La Cala del Moral near Málaga to Swedish-Russian father Eduard, a former boxer, and Russian mother Tatiana Fokina, he started with his father at age three and trained from age five under coach Manolo Rubiales. He ended his junior career as the world No. 2 after winning the 2017 Wimbledon boys' singles title and posting a 20-1 record — the first Spaniard to take that title since Manuel Orantes.

The draw is the shotmaking. Davidovich Fokina owns one of the best drop shots on tour, plays an aggressive, high-variance style whose level swings within a match, and frequently deploys an underarm serve. At 5'11" he leans on quick movement and heavy groundstrokes, dives on every surface — feeding both highlight reels and the occasional injury — and returns with sharp angles.

The career signature is clay-court chaos. He broke Novak Djokovic nine times in a Monte-Carlo second round — a record for breaks of Djokovic in a best-of-three — en route to his first tour final at the 2022 Monte Carlo Masters. His first Slam quarterfinal came at 2021 Roland Garros, sparked by a five-set third-round win over Casper Ruud. The finals kept coming and going: in 2025 he reached four, holding two championship points at Delray Beach and squandering three at the Washington Open.

That Washington run, with wins over Taylor Fritz and Ben Shelton, pushed him into the top 20. He reached another final in Basel, losing to João Fonseca, and climbed to a career-high No. 14 on 3 November 2025. Ranked 22 now, he's still hunting the one line missing from the page.