Sebastian Korda was born into the deepest athletic gene pool in tennis and has spent five tour seasons making the surname stand on its own merit. Born July 5, 2000 in Bradenton, Florida, he's the son of 1998 Australian Open champion and former World No. 2 Petr Korda and former WTA top-30 player Regina Rajchrtová; older sisters Nelly and Jessica are LPGA Tour pros. He skated competitively as a kid before committing to tennis at nine, won the boys' singles title at the 2018 Australian Open, and turned pro that year.
At 6-foot-5 he plays bigger off the ground than the frame suggests — a flat, early-struck backhand, a serve that touches the high 120s, and the rare modern weapon of a one-handed slice he uses to redirect pace rather than just defend. The game travels across surfaces: hardcourt is home, but he reached the 2020 French Open fourth round as a qualifier, falling to Rafael Nadal, his first headline result on clay.
The breakthrough season was 2023, when he reached the Australian Open quarterfinals — squandering a two-set lead and a match point against Karen Khachanov — and climbed to a career-high World No. 23. He owns multiple ATP titles and has banked wins over Daniil Medvedev and Carlos Alcaraz, the kind of scalps that flag a top-15 ceiling whenever the wrist and the consistency cooperate. Injuries — most notably a recurring wrist problem — have repeatedly stalled the climb.
Which frames the current beat: ranked 60 entering the back half of 2026, Korda is again chasing the form that took him to No. 23, with the American hardcourt swing and events like Washington and the US Open the natural runway for a player whose ceiling has never been in doubt — only his availability.