Andrey Rublev came up through Moscow's Spartak club, where his mother coached, and turned pro in 2014 off a decorated junior run that included the 2014 Roland-Garros boys' title and a stint atop the junior rankings. He arrived on tour ahead of his cohort, breaking through at the 2017 US Open — beating a top-10 player and reaching the quarterfinals as a teenager — before the rest of his generation had landed. By the pandemic seasons he'd settled inside the top 10, where he became one of the tour's most dependable big-stage regulars.
The game is loud and unapologetically offensive. Rublev is an ultra-aggressive baseliner built around a forehand that ranks among the heaviest on tour — flat, early, and hit with full-court intent off both wings. He takes time away from opponents by standing on or inside the baseline and refusing to give a free shot back. The flip side is well-documented: the margins are thin, the racket-smashing and on-court volatility are part of the package, and matches can swing on his own error count as much as anyone's.
The résumé is deep without the marquee line. Rublev has stacked multiple ATP titles, including Masters 1000 hardware, and reached a career-high of world No. 5. The asterisk is his Grand Slam ceiling — he has carried a long run of major quarterfinal exits, the most persistent storyline of his career, and the deep-draw breakthrough has stayed just out of reach against the Jannik Sinner–Carlos Alcaraz tier now defining the top. Clay and indoor hard at events like the Monte Carlo Masters and Madrid Open have been his most fertile ground.
Now ranked No. 13, Rublev sits a notch below his peak but remains a dangerous seed every week — the kind of name nobody in the French Open or Cincinnati Open draw wants early.