LJannik Sinner, who in Rome became the second tennis player with a perfect record of Masters 1000 titles, breaking the Italian "drought" in the tournament in his capital, which had lasted since 1976, remains in first place, while his opponent in the final, Norwegian Casper Ruud, climbed eight positions to 17th place.

Spaniard Carlos Alcaraz remains behind Sinner in second place, followed by German Alexander Zverev and Serbian Novak Djokovic, who has already won all nine Masters 1000 titles in a season twice.

Russian Daniil Medvedev, a semifinalist in the Rome tournament, climbed from ninth to seventh place, causing American Taylor Fritz and Australian Alex de Minaur to drop to eighth and ninth places, while Kazakh Alexander Bublik returned to 10th place, equaling his best ranking of all time.

Among the Portuguese, Francisco Cabral climbed two places to 21st in doubles, while in singles, in addition to Nuno Borges, now 50th, Jaime Faria and Henrique Rocha also rose two places each to 117th and 118th, respectively, and Frederico Silva gained three places to 235th.

This trio is trying to join Borges in the Parisian "major" qualifying rounds, with Faria facing Bulgarian Grigor Dimitrov (170th), Rocha facing Hungarian Zsombor Piros (175th), and Silva facing Argentinian Federico Agustin Gómez (181st).

Women's athletes

In the women's category, Belarusian Aryna Sabalenka also remains at the top of the WTA rankings, ahead of Kazakh Elena Rybakina and Polish Iga Swiatek, second and third respectively, while Ukrainian Elina Svitolina, champion in Rome, climbed to seventh place.

Francisca Jorge and Matilde Jorge, who will also compete in the Roland Garros qualifying rounds, occupy the 205th and 251st places, falling one and two positions respectively.

Francisca Jorge will face China's You Xiaodi (who climbed 19 places to 175th), while her younger sister will face American Elvina Kalieva (135th).