Botic Van De Zandschulp is the Netherlands' clean-hitting late bloomer, a right-hander from Veenendaal who spent years on the Futures and Challenger circuit before the tour took notice. He didn't break the top 100 until his mid-twenties, with 2019 — a four-title Challenger/ITF haul — the season that finally pushed him toward the main tour. The patience paid off at the 2021 US Open, where as a qualifier ranked outside the top 100 he ran to the quarterfinals, beating Casper Ruud and Diego Schwartzman before falling to eventual champion Daniil Medvedev — only the third male qualifier in tournament history to reach the last eight.
The game is built on flat, heavy ball-striking off both wings and a willingness to absorb pace and redirect it. He doesn't overwhelm with serve or footspeed; he wins by taking the ball early, flattening rallies, and exposing opponents who expect a passive grinder. That profile makes him a serial ambusher — he's the kind of mid-ranked floater seeded players dread drawing early, equally comfortable on hard courts and clay.
The signature scalp came at the 2024 US Open, where he stunned then-world No. 1 Novak Djokovic in straight sets in the second round — the headline result of a career built on upsetting the elite. He peaked at a career-high ranking inside the top 25 and has been a Davis Cup mainstay for the Netherlands, anchoring a tie that knocked out the United States.
Now 30 and ranked around No. 55, Van De Zandschulp sits in the familiar role of dangerous floater rather than seed, navigating the 2026 clay and hard-court swings alongside countryman Tallon Griekspoor. His draw is never the one a top seed wants — the ceiling is whoever's standing across the net.