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Vacherot: ‘Turn Pressure Into Something Positive’

05.04.2026

Twelve months ago, Valentin Vacherot walked the grounds of the Monte-Carlo Country Club with little fanfare, a local player ranked outside the Top 250 grateful for the chance to compete as a wild card at his hometown tournament.

This year, with the exception of the familiar surroundings, things feel very different.

“I know [the pressure] is going to build,” he said. “It’s good pressure, the kind that makes you want to step onto the court, and then it’s up to me to turn it into something positive because it’s the kind of pressure that helps you find that extra 2–3% physically, in your tennis, and play even better than normal. It’s a bit like what I managed to find last year by playing two very good matches.

Not many people can say this — lots of players have tournaments in their country — but I have one of the 10 biggest tournaments in the world at my club. I’ve been on these courts since I was six or seven years old. I feel like saying ‘Everyone is coming to my place’.”

That sense of ownership has always been there. What has changed is everything else.

A year ago, Vacherot arrived in Monte-Carlo ranked No. 254, still searching for a breakthrough. His goals were modest: compete, learn, enjoy the moment. The pressure was minimal, almost nonexistent.

Now, he returns as a Masters 1000 champion.

His stunning run at the Rolex Shanghai Masters last October altered the trajectory of his career overnight. Entering the tournament as a qualifier, Vacherot produced one of the most improbable title runs in recent ATP Tour history, defeating Holger Rune and Novak Djokovic en route to the championship match, where he edged cousin and fellow former Texas A&M college player Arthur Rinderknech.

It was the kind of moment that players dream about and the kind that inevitably reshapes expectations.

“I know very well that everything that happened was a bit of a peak,” Vacherot said. “A little cloud. And that I was going to come back down at some point.”

That awareness has defined his approach in the months since. Rather than chasing the high of Shanghai, Vacherot has focused on building consistency — a less glamorous, but ultimately more sustainable, measure of progress.

“There hasn’t been a huge result, but there haven’t been many bad ones either,” he said. “That, already, I’m happy with.”

It is a grounded perspective for a player who, just months ago, found himself thrust into the spotlight. With ranking points to defend and a new status on Tour, the pressure is undeniably greater. But for Vacherot, it is the kind he welcomes.

“It’s good pressure,” he said. “The kind that helps you find that extra two or three percent physically and in your tennis.”

That mindset will be tested immediately this week.

Unlike last year, when he entered with little to lose, Vacherot now arrives with expectation — both internal and external. He is no longer the underdog story unfolding quietly on an outside court. He is a player to watch, particularly on a surface that has shaped his identity.

“I was born on clay,” he said. “I’ve played on it for 18 years. The transition is natural for me.”

That familiarity, combined with the comfort of home, could prove invaluable. In recent days, Vacherot has trained extensively at the Monte-Carlo Country Club, settling into a routine that blends preparation with the comforts of everyday life.

“Living here makes it easy,” he said. “I can enjoy my family, my routine. That helps.”

Still, the emotional weight of the moment is unavoidable.

Each year, he has described feeling like a child again when the tournament arrives. This year, that excitement is layered with something new: belief.

The memories that first drew him to the sport remain vivid: watching his brother Benjamin Balleret’s run at the tournament, seeing Richard Gasquet stun Roger Federer, attending Davis Cup ties as a young fan. Those moments once felt distant, aspirational.

Now, they feel closer than ever.

“I want to go for semi-finals, finals… and a title this year,” Vacherot said. “Why not here, at home?”

It is a bold statement, but one that reflects how far he has come.

From local wildcard to Masters 1000 champion, from outsider to contender, Vacherot’s journey over the past 12 months has transformed not just his ranking, but his place in the game.

And yet, as he walks through the familiar corridors of Monte-Carlo once more, one thing remains unchanged: For all the noise, all the expectation, all the rapid evolution of his career, this still feels like home.

Vacherot faces a qualifier or lucky loser in the opening round. If he wins, he will play World No. 5 and last year’s finalist Lorenzo Musetti.

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