Rome Previews: Novak Djokovic is back, and his timing may be perfect

Each day, we'll preview three must-stream matches from the Internazionali BNL d'Italia.



Novak Djokovic of Serbia trains ahead of the Internazionali BNL d'Italia Day One at Foro Italico on May 5, 2026, in Rome, Italy. (Photo by Domenico Cippitelli/NurPhoto via Getty Images)
© Domenico Cippitelli/NurPhoto

Novak Djokovic vs. Dino Prizmic

Djokovic hasn’t played in two months, but his chances for a 25th major title improved during his time away. Carlos Alcaraz’s absence in Rome and Paris may give the Serb, who turns 39 next week, a jolt of optimism. He’ll start his abbreviated Roland Garros prep against Prizmic, a rising 20-year-old Croat.

The two have already had one tussle, at the Australian Open, which Djokovic won in four sets. But Prizmic has a feisty physical style that goes well with clay. Djokovic will need to come out of the gates quickly to match his young opponent’s energy. Winner: Djokovic

👉 Estimated start time: 8:10 a.m.

▶️ STREAM live on the Tennis Channel app 🔗

Rafael Jodar vs. Nuno Borges

When March began, Jodar was an unknown hopeful ranked outside the Top 100; two months later he’s the 32nd seed in Rome. In between, the 19-year-old Spaniard made himself the ATP’s Next Big Thing with a 250 title, a 500 semifinal, a strong showing against Jannik Sinner, and some jaw-dropping ground-stroke m.p.h.s. How will he deal with the expectations that come with phenom status?

We’ll get an idea when he faces the 52nd-ranked Borges, a solid and occasionally dangerous Portuguese veteran who likes clay and has a knack for creating angles from both wings. They’ve never played. Winner: Jodar

👉 Start time: Not before 5:00 a.m.

▶️ STREAM live on the Tennis Channel app 🔗

Jannik Sinner ends run of Spanish teen Rafael Jodar | Madrid highlights3:56

Karolina Muchova vs. Anastasia Potapova

When healthy, Muchova’s varied style makes her a perennial dark horse at any big tournament. Is Potapova in the process of becoming something similar?

The rangy Russian has always had the ball-striking skills, but never the emotional equilibrium, to reach the upper ranks. Until last week. Her semifinal run in Madrid, which included a win over Elena Rybakina, launched her from 97 to 38. Now she’ll need to take another step up.

The old Potapova was 1-4 against Muchova, who reached a final on clay in Stuttgart last month. Let’s see if this Potapova has any new answers for her. Winner: Muchova

👉 Estimated start time: 6:10 a.m.

▶️ STREAM live on the Tennis Channel app 🔗