Alexander Shevchenko is a Russian-born, Vienna-trained baseliner who has carried the Kazakhstan flag since the start of 2024 — a switch he's described as natural given his mother's Kazakh roots. Born in Rostov-on-Don in November 2000, he moved to Austria young and fell into the orbit of Gunther Bresnik, the coach behind Dominic Thiem, after a chance family meeting in Kitzbühel at age 10. He came up the orthodox way: ITF and Challenger grind first, top 300 in early 2022, top 100 by April 2023.
At 6-foot-2 and right-handed off a two-handed backhand, Shevchenko is a flat, aggressive ball-striker who takes time away from opponents and hits through the court off both wings. The game is built for indoor hard courts and quick surfaces — when his timing is on, he redlines from the baseline rather than working the margins. The trade-off is the one that follows aggressive flat-hitters everywhere: error counts spike when the radar slips, and the consistency to grind out attritional matches still lags the firepower.
His breakout was the 2023 indoor swing, the run that vaulted him toward his career-high inside the top 50 and announced him as a name to watch among the next tier of hard-court threats. Since then he's been a fixture in the main draws, trading sets with the established middle of the tour and chasing the kind of signature scalp that resets a season. He's circled events like the Vienna Open and Almaty Open — home soil under the Kazakh flag — as the surfaces where his game travels best.
Now ranked 97, Shevchenko sits in the familiar churn just outside the top tier, where every Masters main-draw appearance against the likes of Karen Khachanov or Andrey Rublev is a chance to climb. The ceiling is the indoor hard court; the project is making the rest of the calendar pay.