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Predicting Team USA’s 2028 Olympic basketball roster: Who joins Kevin Durant?

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The 2026 Winter Olympics concluded on Sunday, and the NBA is already looking ahead to the 2028 games. Recently, four-time Olympian Kevin Durant said that he wants to play for a historic fifth gold medal in Los Angeles. “Hell yeah, I want to play,” Durant said. “I would love to, but I’ve got to stay on top of my game. I’m not expecting, I want to produce on the floor and make Grant (Hill) and whoever is making the decisions, want to put me on the team. I don’t want — not just for seniority. I want to still prove I can help the team win.”

Durant may ultimately deserve a spot on merit — 2028 is still a ways away for a 37-year-old, but he is still an All-Star-caliber NBA player — but if he wants a spot, it’s his on seniority. He is the greatest Olympic basketball player of all time, and his skillset should age well enough and fits so smoothly next to other elite players that, short of significant injury- or age-related decline, it’s hard to envision a scenario in which he wouldn’t be able to help Team USA.

But that exacerbates a first-world problem for Team USA: after years of fear about the American developmental pipeline, we’re in the middle of a talent boom. The last handful of drafts have been very kind to American prospects, and when you consider all of the great existing American players who have already worn the red, white and blue, it suddenly gets very difficult to trim the roster down to 12 players. With Durant in place, there are really only 11 spots.

So… who do we think is filling those other slots? We’re going to take a shot at filling in the rest of the team. Keep in mind that we’re still more than two years away here, so aging will be a factor. So will the stylistic differences between the NBA and FIBA game. Remember, FIBA has no defensive three-second rule, no goaltending and a shorter 3-point line, so shooting is at an absolute premium. Officials tend to call fewer fouls as well, allowing for more physicality defensively. We still have a ways to go before 2028, but for now, these are the players who make the most sense four Team USA’s next Olympic roster.

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The stars

Yes, yes, I know, almost everyone who plays for Team USA is going to qualify as a “star.” But every Olympic cycle reminds us this process is a bit more complex than slapping the 12 biggest names together. We just watched Jayson Tatum ride the bench in the 2024 run to gold while his less-accomplished NBA teammate, Derrick White, played a vital rotation role. The idea here is to grab a handful of the best players in the NBA and then use the rest of the roster to round out the team with specialists.

Now, Durant will be on the team, but he will be 39 when the Olympics arrive. He’s probably coming off of the bench. We’ll address the bigs separately. Fortunately, the four other starters appear to be relatively straightforward at this point.

  • Cade Cunningham is, at worst, the fourth-best point guard in the NBA. Shai Gilgeous-Alexander is Canadian, Luka Dončić is Slovenian and Stephen Curry likely won’t be back as a 40-year-old in 2028. That leaves Cunningham as the obvious choice as our starting point guard. His playmaking should fit in quite well on an Olympic roster with far more offensive firepower than his Pistons, and his size and defensive versatility ensure he won’t get picked on. This one’s a no-brainer.
  • Anthony Edwards won gold in 2024, has improved markedly as a shooter and post player since then and will turn 27 soon after the 2028 Olympics. He should be at the peak of his powers at this point and could easily be the best American player in the NBA. Once again, this one is obvious.
  • Jayson Tatum really should have been one of the core members of the 2024 team. American Olympians usually only play once or twice before handing the baton to the next generation. Durant and LeBron James didn’t do that last time, so that forced Tatum to the bench, where Steve Kerr seemingly determined that despite being a jack of all trades, he was not enough of a master at any single one to justify consistent specialist minutes off the bench. Well, with James presumably done competing for gold and Durant headed for the bench, Tatum’s versatility alongside other stars suddenly looks a lot more valuable. Assuming he doesn’t significantly decline as a result of his torn Achilles, he should still be a deserving starter. He was the best American forward in the NBA before he got hurt, and arguably the best overall American player.
  • Cooper Flagg rounds out our core. We’re admittedly doing some projecting here, but it feels relatively safe to do so. He’s just the fourth rookie in NBA history to average 20 points, six rebounds and four assists. The first three were Michael Jordan, Larry Bird and Luka Dončić. Odds are, he’ll be a special player by his third season. His defensive versatility and competitiveness should fit in quite well here.

So let’s take stock here. In Cunningham, Edwards, Tatum and Flagg, we have an enormous set of starters in which our smallest player, Edwards, is 6-foot-4. Defensively, this foursome should be stellar and capable of pretty much any scheme Erik Spoelstra wants to run. There’s plenty of playmaking here too. Cunningham currently trails only Nikola Jokić for the NBA lead in assists, and Tatum and Edwards have both averaged at least five assists per game in a season despite not playing point guard. Throw in Flagg’s passing and you have a really balanced group that can all set one another up.

If it’s lacking anywhere, it’s probably shooting, and that’s only a minor blemish. Cunningham is roughly a 34% shooter from deep, Flagg is at around 30%, and while Tatum is typically a reliable shooter, his jumper seemingly abandoned him during his last run with Team USA. Fortunately, we have a wide pool of American players to choose from to fill in that “gap” and round out the rest of the team. Let’s start with the big men, who deserve their own category. Fortunately, there isn’t really a shortage of American bigs who can shoot.

The bigs

Our first center choice is easy. We want a big who can shoot? Chet Holmgren is roughly a 37% 3-point shooter. Problem solved. That he’s also a perpetual Defensive Player of the Year candidate is a nice bonus. He’s not a great rebounder, but having Tatum and Flagg at forward should help offset that minor deficiency, and besides, we have two more big slots at our disposal here. We can stylistically cherrypick from this point on.

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Rebounding largely fits into the broader need for physicality. Serbia gave Team USA its biggest test in 2024, so winning in 2028 means having an answer for Nikola Jokić. Alperen Sengun, Domantas Sabonis and Giannis Antetokounmpo loom as possible opponents here as well, and though he plays differently, Team USA needs as many stylistic options as it can find to throw at Victor Wembanyama. So for our second big slot, we’re looking for a bit of heft.

This isn’t something the American hoops pipeline tends to deliver much anymore, but we fortunately have a pretty straightforward choice here. It’s Jalen Duren. He comes with baked in chemistry with Cunningham, he rebounds, and although the sample in the modern NBA is always going to be fairly small, his numbers defending the post have by and large been excellent. Over the past three seasons, he has been in the 75th percentile or better at post up points allowed per possession. Again, tiny sample, but it checks out. When you’re as strong as Duren, you’re probably going to be tough to score on near the basket.

The third spot comes down to two names, and they’re pretty similar players. Both Bam Adebayo and Evan Mobley are enormously versatile defensive big men who have improved meaningfully as shooters in recent years and can create some of their own looks. The standard aging curve would suggest that Mobley, who will be 27 when the Olympics roll around, is likely to be better at that point than Adebayo, who will be 31. He might even be better now. But Erik Spoelstra is coaching this team, and he’s probably going to lean toward the player he’s more comfortable with, which would surely be the one he’s coached in Miami for almost a decade now. It wouldn’t hurt to have a bit more Olympic experience on this roster, so Adebayo’s 2024 run is a plus as well. If it’s a tie or close to it, he’s probably going to win. If he’s declined at all by then, though, Mobley is ready to go.

The supporting cast

So right now, we have eight spots locked up: Durant, Cunningham, Edwards, Tatum, Flagg, Holmgren, Duren and Adebayo. There are three pretty straightforward roles we need to fill with our four remaining slots: backup point guard, designated shooter and designated defender.

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  • Tyrese Maxey is our backup point guard. His speed and shooting contrasts nicely with the bigger Cunningham, giving Team USA a curveball to throw at opposing bench lineups. The name of the game here is versatility, and Cunningham and Maxey just complement each other perfectly.
  • Kon Knueppel is the clear designated shooter choice. He’s leading the NBA in made 3-pointers as a rookie. He’s averaging eight 3-point attempts per game, and the only players to shoot a higher percentage from deep on that volume in a season are Stephen Curry and Duncan Robinson. He’s on track to succeed Curry as the best shooter in the NBA, so if we’re looking for one, pure shooter for the roster, he’s our guy.
  • Amen Thompson is our defensive specialist. This was the trickiest choice. He just checked the most boxes. He’s perhaps the NBA’s best athlete, he’s 6-foot-7 with a seven-foot wingspan so he’s positionally versatile, and FIBA’s whistle should be very kind to him given how physically he likes to play.

We’ll get into some of the other players I considered for those slots in the snub section, but for now, we have one last slot to fill. It’s a tricky one. There’s no specific need we’re looking to address here. We’ve checked every positional box, and because of how big some of our guards are, there’s not really an impetus to seek out size here either. It’s just a matter of picking the best available American player.

Now, this could change in the next two years, but I believe at this point the best available American player is Donovan Mitchell. He’ll be closing in on his 32nd birthday by then, so decline is a real possibility, but he still hasn’t played and 2028 will probably be his last realistic chance. He’s a seven-time NBA All-Star. Every other active player to be chosen to that many All-Star teams has at least been chosen by Team USA, though Kawhi Leonard dropped out due to injury. He finished fifth in MVP voting last year and just ranked seventh in ESPN’s latest MVP straw poll for this season. Only two Americans finished above him, Cunningham and someone we’ll get to in a moment. Purely as an individual, he is the most accomplished American player without a gold medal.

So Mitchell is the pick to round out the roster. That leaves us with the following 12-man team…

The final roster

Point guard

Cade Cunningham

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Shooting guard

Anthony Edwards

Small forward

Jayson Tatum

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Power forward

Cooper Flagg

Center

Chet Holmgren

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Guard

Tyrese Maxey

Guard

Donovan Mitchell

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Guard

Kon Knueppel

Forward

Amen Thompson

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Forward

Kevin Durant

Center

Bam Adebayo

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Center

Jalen Duren

The snubs

So, we mentioned one other American player who just outranked Mitchell in the MVP straw poll. That would be Jaylen Brown. In pure basketball terms, he would be a reasonable choice. He’s having the best season of his career, he played for Team USA in the FIBA World Cup, and our roster does lean a bit more toward guards than forwards.

Ultimately, the prediction was informed by two factors. The first is that I simply think Mitchell is slightly better. In the best year of Brown’s career, he and Mitchell are still basically even in terms of scoring volume. Brown is the better defender given his size, but Mitchell is a better playmaker, is more efficient and beats Brown in most of the all-in-one metrics pretty meaningfully. They’re close enough that if there was a specific need for something Brown did, he’d be a fair choice. But if that were the case, we would have carved out a specialist slot for him and we didn’t.

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The other factor was politics. Brown criticized Team USA in 2024 for his belief that it allows Nike influence over roster decisions. Whether that’s true or not, it’s a headache Team USA would probably prefer to avoid. If we were talking about a foundational part of USA Basketball, that would be one thing, but for one of the last slots on the roster, the tie is probably going to go to someone else.

The other candidate for the final, “best available American player” slot was Jalen Williams. He’s not the individual creator Brown is, but he’s a better defender and on the right side of the aging curve. He’s having a down year as he recovers from a wrist injury, but it’s reasonable to assume that he’ll at least bounce back to the level he played at last season, when he was an All-NBA choice. If USA Basketball wants a forward for this last slot, he’s the easy pick. But in a tie, I’m giving the edge to the older player. Williams will have more chances.

Backup point guard was a nightmare. Tyrese Haliburton was on the 2024 team, though he barely played. Jalen Brunson missed the cut, and he reportedly wants another shot in 2028. Either would have been worthy choices. But the guard pool is so deep that, with two years out, I’m inclined not to gamble on what Haliburton looks like post-Achilles tear. I’m a bit more comfortable with Tatum, a forward, looking mostly like himself after that injury compared to Haliburton, a guard. Brunson is the oldest of the three, right in the same range as Mitchell, but his playing style is a bit more tailored to the NBA given his mid-range mastery and defensive vulnerability at his size. Both were agonizing cuts, especially given how well Haliburton’s passing fits into the FIBA game, but we only have 12 spots.

Devin Booker didn’t really fit into a neat box, but he was another brutal cut considering how well he played in 2024. But Mitchell has outplayed him for several years now, and we’ve now had two full seasons of subpar 3-point shooting out of Booker, so he wasn’t going to get any consideration in the designated shooter slot. He’s not beating players off of the dribble quite as easily anymore either, so I’d be a bit concerned with how he’ll look in two-and-a-half years.

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I could have gone in so many different directions for the designated defender slot. Jalen Suggs isn’t durable enough. Herb Jones doesn’t do enough offensively. Alex Caruso is too old. Cason Wallace is too small. The two players that most seriously challenged Amen Thompson were his brother Ausar and Stephon Castle. In the end, Amen’s offensive advantage over his brother and his slight size advantage over Castle were the tiebreakers. Castle is certainly better on offense than Thompson, though, and if either of them can just get to passable as a 3-point shooter, that would make picking a winner easier. Speaking of shooting, that was what kept Scottie Barnes off the team. He could qualify as a defensive specialist, though he’s obviously more well-rounded than that overall. This team just already has enough of what he does offensively, and Thompson is an easier fit in the on-ball defensive role we’re looking to fill.

The only other big man I gave any consideration to was Walker Kessler. He hasn’t played much this season due to injury, but he played for Team USA in the 2023 World Cup and he checks the same size and physicality boxes that Duren does. Duren’s growth into an All-Star this season made him the clear choice for this role on the team, but I’m keeping an eye on Kessler just on the faint hope that his experiments with 3-point shooting ever bear fruit. If he ever learns to shoot at his size, he’d be a great FIBA player, so watch out over the next two years.

And then there are the youngsters. I don’t think Reed Sheppard is going to catch Knueppel, but he was a similarly gifted college shooter. The 2025 draft class is promising enough that some of these players, like Cedric Coward or Derik Queen, may be heard from in the years to come. And of course, we have three enormously promising American youngsters coming in June in Darryn Peterson, AJ Dybantsa and Cam Boozer. Making the team after only two years as a professional is rare, but not unheard of. Keldon Johnson made the cut after his rookie season in 2020, and Anthony Davis played for Team USA before he even played in the NBA. Neither played major roles in the Olympics, but both won gold medals, so we can’t rule the upcoming rookies out.

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Winter Paralympics 2026: Menna Fitzpatrick included in Great Britain squad

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Great Britain’s Menna Fitzpatrick will compete in the Winter Paralympics, almost three months after suffering a significant knee injury.

Para-alpine skier Fitzpatrick, Britain’s most decorated Winter Paralympian with six medals, sustained the injury in training in December but opted against surgery in a bid to compete at the Milan-Cortina Games, which start on 6 March.

The 27-year-old and her guide, Katie Guest, are among the second wave of athletes named in the GB team., external

Fred Warburton and guide James Hannan, Sam Cozens and guide Adam Hall, Hester Poole and guide Ali Hall, and Dominic Allen also make the Para-alpine team.

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Snowboarder Davy Zyw has been included and is thought to be the first snowsport athlete with motor neurone disease (MND) to compete at the Games.

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Devin Haney’s hit list: two champions, three undefeated rivals and a British star

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Devin Haney’s father and trainer, Bill Haney, has named six potential opponents that his son could face in the near future.

‘The Dream’ claimed his WBO welterweight title in November, securing a second-round knockdown before unanimously outpointing and dethroning Brian Norman Jr.

In doing so, the 27-year-old became a three-division world champion and cemented himself as a top 10 pound-for-pound star, with many considering him the flagship fighter at 147lbs.

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But despite having only just made his mark on the welterweight division, Haney must now turn his attention towards a selection of fearsome rivals.

Top of his list, according to Bill, is Gervonta ‘Tank’ Davis, who was stripped of his WBA lightweight title last month following a series of domestic violence charges. Even if the controversial Davis returns to the sport, he would face a big size disadvantage against Haney.

Elsewhere on the list is WBO super-lightweight champion Shakur Stevenson, yet the four-division world champion has said he would only fight Haney at a catchweight of 144lbs, or at welterweight with a 10lbs rehydration clause.

Even so, it appears the American has afforded himself plenty of alternative options, with Bill Haney revealing several of them to ALL THE SMOKE FIGHT.

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“I think ‘Tank’ is at the top of [Devin’s list], maybe Shakur is next.

“Jaron Ennis; Conor Benn might be on there towards the bottom. I think Ryan Garcia is No.10; Brian Norman was on there.

“Keyshawn Davis is on there too. He can get it too.”

With Ennis campaigning at 154lbs and aiming for his own intriguing contest with Vergil Ortiz Jr before targeting belts, Haney is unlikely to deliver on that particular fight just yet.

Potential bouts with Garcia, Keyshawn Davis and Benn, however, could soon become far more realistic, especially now that Garcia offers a unification as well as a storyline from their first controversial encounter.

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WTA roundup: Rebeka Masarova pulls off first-round upset in Austin

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Tennis: Miami OpenMar 22, 2025; Miami, FL, USA; Rebeka Masarova (SUI) hits a forehand against Danielle Collins (USA)(not pictured) on day five of the Miami Open at Hard Rock Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Geoff Burke-Imagn Images

Swiss qualifier Rebeka Masarova overpowered third-seeded Xinyu Wang of China 6-3, 6-2 in the first round of the ATX Open on Monday in Austin, Texas.

Masarova won 85.7% of her first-serve points (30 of 35) and saved four of the five break points she faced. She avenged a loss to Wang three weeks ago in the second round at Cluj-Napoca, Romania.

The only other seeded player in action on Monday, No. 7 Anna Bondar of Hungary, lost to Uzbekistan’s Kamilla Rakhimova 6-3, 7-5.

In a matchup of U.S. qualifiers, Whitney Osuigwe rallied past Elizabeth Mandlik 2-6, 6-3, 6-1.

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Taylor Townsend of the United States edged the Czech Republic’s Linda Fruhvirtova 4-6, 7-6 (3), 7-5, but two other U.S. players lost. Czech qualifier Nikola Bartunkova beat Katie Volynets 6-4, 7-5, and Russia’s Oksana Selekhmeteva defeated Alycia Parks 6-4, 3-6, 6-3.

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Marina Stakusic, a 21-year-old Canadian ranked 142nd in the world, upset fifth-seeded Dayana Yastremska of Ukraine 6-4, 6-3 in the first round at Merida, Mexico.

The result was the first tour-level win for Stakusic this year. She fell in the first round at Canberra, Australian, then qualified for the Australian Open before losing in the first round at Melbourne. Stakusic was aided on Monday by Yastremska’s six double faults.

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Great Britain’s Katie Boulter and Colombia’s Emiliana Arango earned straight-set wins, while Andorra’s Victoria Jimenez Kasintseva eked out a 6-4, 1-6, 6-4 victory over Kazakhstan’s Yulia Putintseva.

–Field Level Media

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Dynasty QB Rankings Update: February 2026 movers, Malik Willis watch, and more.

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Dynasty ranking changes from January to February are generally pretty minimal. They are mostly influenced by the smattering of news we get and my first run at 2026 Fantasy Football projections. This year, at quarterback, the changes in the rankings are almost completely nonexistent. Just don’t get used to this static situation because before I release my March rankings, there are at least eight quarterbacks who could change uniforms and their Dynasty outlook radically altered.

My way-too-early 2026 quarterback projections are here.

The first two obvious names are Kyler Murray and Tua Tagovailoa. Both of their respective teams have new coaches and have expressed at least some interest in moving on from their very expensive quarterbacks. The risk of them not finding starting jobs has already been factored in to some degree, but it could be worse. For either of these quarterbacks, if their situations are unresolved a month from now, I will be more nervous. At the same time, if they find a new home as a starter in March, they could be risers. I am more optimistic both about Murray’s chances of finding a starting job and his Fantasy upside if he does, which is why he is ranked considerably higher than Tagovailoa.

Earlier in February, I had Jay Felicio from QB List on Fantasy Football Today Dynasty to discuss the state of the quarterback position. Check it out:

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The free agent I am most interested in monitoring in the next month is Malik Willis. From my view, those two teams we just talked about, the Dolphins and the Cardinals, are the two most likely to give Willis a starter’s contract in 2026. The path to him being a riser in the next month is if Willis receives a contract that offers him more long-term security than what Justin Fields received last year. These two coaching staffs have close connections to the Packers, so if anyone is willing to take that risk, it should be them. Over the past two seasons, Willis has thrown 89 passes and averaged 10.9 yards per attempt with six touchdowns and zero interceptions. Combine that with his rushing upside, and if Willis gets a three-year deal, he could vault into the top 20 in the rankings below.

Other quarterbacks who could see the biggest gains or losses in the next month are Jacoby Brissett, Aaron Rodgers, Daniel Jones, and Geno Smith. Of course, we have no reason to expect Rodgers to make a decision that fast, and we’ll have to wait until August at least to see how Jones’ rehab is coming. One thing is for sure: We should expect far more changes in the Dynasty QB rankings next month than we got this month. We may even get to add Derek Carr back in if he decides to return to the NFL.

I don’t rank rookies until they are drafted, but I have already started to think about where I will put them. Assuming Fernando Mendoza is taken first overall by the Raiders, I anticipate he will rank somewhere between QB15 and QB18 in the rankings below. I would be surprised if any other rookie cracks the top 25.

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Here are my updated Dynasty QB rankings:

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Alexander Zverev vs Corentin Moutet preview, head-to-head, odds, prediction & betting tips

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Match Details

Fixture: Alexander Zverev vs Corentin Moutet

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Date: Tuesday, February 24, 2026

Tournament: ATP Mexican Open 2026

Round: First Round

Category: ATP 500

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Surface: Hard (outdoor)

Venue: Arena GNP Seguros, Acapulco, Mexico

Prize Money: US$2,469,450 (total prize pool)

Live Telecast: USA – Tennis Channel | UK – Sky Sports | Canada – TSN

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Alexander Zverev vs Corentin Moutet preview

Zverev in action at the 2026 Australian Open (Source: Getty)Zverev in action at the 2026 Australian Open (Source: Getty)
Zverev in action at the 2026 Australian Open (Source: Getty)

Alexander Zverev is set to get his 2026 Mexican Open campaign underway with a potentially tricky first-round outing against Corentin Moutet.

The World No. 4 German is the top seed in Acapulco, and the ATP 500 hardcourt event will mark his first competitive outing since his heartbreaking loss to Carlos Alcaraz in the semifinals of the Australian Open. Zverev finished as the runner-up in Acapulco back in 2019, but two years later, managed to win the title by defeating Stefanos Tsitsipas in the final.

Moutet, the World No. 35 from France, like Zverev, was beaten by Alcaraz in Melbourne. The crafty Frenchman then took a short break before featuring in ATP Tour-level action once more at the recently-concluded Delray Beach Open. Here, eventual runner-up Tommy Paul dashed his hopes in the very first round.

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Alexander Zverev vs Corentin Moutet head-to-head

Moutet in action at the 2026 Delray Beach Open (Source: Getty)Moutet in action at the 2026 Delray Beach Open (Source: Getty)
Moutet in action at the 2026 Delray Beach Open (Source: Getty)

Zverev and Moutet have locked horns twice in the past and on both occasions, the German has come out on top. Their first meeting, at the ATP 250 tournament in Stuttgart last year, resulted in a straight-set win for Zverev. However, their second clash, at last year’s China Open, went the distance, with the German ultimately downing the Frenchman 7-5, 3-6, 6-3.


Alexander Zverev vs Corentin Moutet odds

Player Name Moneyline Handicap Bets Total Games
Alexander Zverev -500 -4.5 (+105) Over 21.5 (-125)
Corentin Moutet +340 +4.5 (-150) Under 21.5 (-115)

(Odds via BetMGM)


Alexander Zverev vs Corentin Moutet prediction

Zverev is a heavy favorite to defeat Corentin Moutet in their upcoming first-round match at the 2026 Mexican Open. The German, the 2021 champion in Acapulco, has started 2026 strongly, reaching the semifinals of the Australian Open and boasting a 5-1 record in his recent matches.

Conversely, Moutet has struggled with form, losing four of his last six matches, and has never defeated the German. Zverev’s superior power, consistent serving, and experience on the hard courts of Mexico make him far too strong for the Frenchman.

While Moutet is talented, he is unlikely to break through Zverev’s defense. Expect a dominant performance from Zverev, cruising to a straight-sets victory.. The match should confirm Zverev’s status as a top contender for the 2026 Acapulco title.

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Pick: Zverev to win in straight sets.


Alexander Zverev vs Corentin Moutet betting tips

Tip 1: An upset is possible given Zverev’s return from a break, making ‘Corentin Moutet +4.5 Games’ a potential alternative for those expecting a closer contest than the straight-set prediction.

Tip 2: Zverev to win all his service games.