Marton Fucsovics is the standard-bearer for Hungarian men's tennis — a Nyíregyháza-born right-hander who showed early talent in basketball before committing to the racket. The junior payoff was emphatic: he became World No. 1 junior after capturing the 2010 Wimbledon boys' singles title without dropping a set. The pro climb was the opposite of overnight. He turned pro in 2008 and spent years grinding the Challenger circuit before finally cracking the top 100 in 2017.
The game is built on physicality and a forehand he leans on as his primary weapon, backed by a flat, dependable two-handed backhand and the conditioning to win long, attritional baseline exchanges. He stands 6'2", a frame that fuels a serve that can touch around 120 mph, with slice and kick variations off the second ball. His return game travels — second-serve return and break-point pressure are where he does most of his damage against bigger names.
The résumé peaked in 2019. He reached a career-high No. 31 and became the highest-ranked Hungarian since Balázs Taróczy in 1983. The signature title came a year earlier: at the Geneva Open he upset two-time defending champion Stan Wawrinka, beat Steve Johnson in the semis, and won his first ATP title. The Slam highlights are louder still — at Roland Garros he stunned No. 5 Daniil Medvedev for his first top-10 win, and he rallied past No. 7 Andrey Rublev in five sets at 2021 Wimbledon to become Hungary's first men's quarterfinalist there since 1948.
The recent chapters prove the durability. He won the 2024 Bucharest title past Mariano Navone — beating Tallon Griekspoor and Alejandro Tabilo en route — and added Winston-Salem in 2025. At 34 and ranked 75, Fucsovics is still inside the top 100, still living off the legs.