Fabian Marozsan is scheduled to play Stefanos Tsitsipas on April 14, 2026, at 3:30 p.m. CEST in the Munich ATP 500 last 16. The matchup brings together two players coming in with uneven recent results, and Tsitsipas is carrying the sharper pressure after another early exit last week in Monte Carlo.
Marozsan has won three of his last five matches and last week lost to Hurkacz in the second round in straight sets. Tsitsipas has lost three of his last five matches and went out to Cerundolo in the opening round in Monte Carlo, also in straight sets. The source says Marozsan enjoys playing on clay, a surface that can make this a more awkward test than the ranking gap might suggest.
The pair have met only once before, with Tsitsipas leading the head-to-head 1-0. Even so, the bigger name is the one under the most scrutiny. Tsitsipas is currently ranked outside the top 60, a steep fall for a former world number 3, and the source describes him as being in terrible form and lacking confidence.
That adds weight to a match that already matters beyond a single round in Munich. Marozsan reached the semifinals there last season before losing to Zverev, so he arrives with at least one recent deep run on the same stage. Tsitsipas, by contrast, is trying to stop the slide before it hardens into something more damaging.
The tension is that the head-to-head favors Tsitsipas, but the form line does not. Marozsan has the better recent rhythm, the clay-court comfort, and none of the ranking damage that now shadows Tsitsipas. If the Greek player cannot settle early in Munich, the result could say as much about where his game is right now as any ranking ever could.
What happens next is simple enough: Tsitsipas gets a chance to answer the doubts on April 14, and Marozsan gets a chance to prove that his recent results on clay are no accident. In a tournament where reputation and current form are pointing in opposite directions, the match should tell the truth quickly.




