ATP Barcelona, Spain

Holger Rune ousts Casper Ruud in Barcelona, thanks social media for making H2H a 'big deal'

The 21-year-old handed the defending champion a 6-4, 6-2 defeat Friday.



BARCELONA, SPAIN - APRIL 18: Holger Rune of Denmark celebrates a point during against Casper Ruud of Norway in the Men's Singles Quarterfinals match during Day Five of the Barcelona Open Banc Sabadell 2025 at Real Club De Tenis Barcelona on April 18, 2025 in Barcelona, Spain. (Photo by Pedro Salado/Getty Images)
© 2025 Pedro Salado

Sixth seed Holger Rune produced the type of ‘explosive’ performance he was looking for Friday to oust defending Barcelona Open Banc Sabadell champion Casper Ruud, 6-4, 6-2, in the quarterfinals.

Rune jumped out with the first four games before Ruud settled into the contest. But after serving out the opening set, the Dane once again surged to a double-break lead in set two for a decisive 88-minute victory.

It cemented Rune’s second win in eight career meetings with his Scandinavian counterpart, a stat he thanked for being played up going into this latest encounter.

“It’s no secret that ATP made a big deal about it on social media, our head to head. So thanks for that,” Rune told ATP Media on court afterwards.

“But I just saw it as another match. Casper, I have bunch of respect for him, He’s a great player and I’m very happy to be able to beat him today. I think I played on my terms. I was very explosive and this is the way I want to play.”

INTERVIEW: Holger Rune plays on his terms to sink Casper Ruud in Barcelona1:03

Last week in Monte Carlo, Rune was forced to retire from a match due to food poisoning for the second time this season (he trailed Nuno Borges 6-2, 3-0). Now with three wins under his belt after recovering, the 21-year-old eyes a return to the Top 10 and faces Karen Khachanov for a place in Sunday’s championship, The Russian cooled off home favorite Alejandro Davidovich Fokina, 6-4, 7-5.

In exiting, Ruud will drop at least five spots to No. 15 when Monday’s rankings are released. The two-time French Open finalist began the European clay-court season at No. 7, though was eliminated in the round of 16 of Monte Carlo by Alexei Popyrin a year after finishing runner-up at the 1000-level event.