Joao Fonseca will play Rafael Jódar in the third round of the Madrid Open 2026 on Sunday, April 26, with the match scheduled for around 16:10 Brasília time. The meeting comes after Marin Cilic withdrew from his planned match against Fonseca because of a health issue, opening the door for the Brazilian’s next test in Madrid.
It is a new checkpoint for Fonseca in a tournament where he had never before made it past the second round. This is his third appearance at the Madrid Masters 1000, and his path has ended early in each of the last two visits, with Cameron Norrie sending him out in 2024 and Tommy Paul doing the same in 2025. On Sunday, he gets a first professional meeting with a player who has surged quickly through the rankings and the tour calendar.
Jódar, 19, was born in Madrid and entered April 2026 as Spain’s fourth-highest ranked player, after climbing to a career-best No. 42 in singles and No. 344 in doubles. He said Rafael Nadal was his main inspiration, and his rise has been steep enough to make him one of the home crowd’s most closely watched young names. He won his first Challenger title in Greece in August 2025, added another in Lincoln, United States, a few months later, and put together three consecutive Challenger titles as he moved from outside the top 800 at the start of 2025 to inside the top 200 by year’s end.
That momentum carried into 2026. Jódar made his Grand Slam debut at the Australian Open, won his first main-draw Grand Slam match there, then followed with strong runs at the Miami Open and Indian Wells that helped push him into the ATP top 100. In April 2026, he won the Grand Prix Hassan II in Morocco for his first ATP title and later reached his first ATP 500 semifinal at the Barcelona Open. Fonseca has already shown he can handle rising opponents this spring, including in matches tracked in Munich and Monte Carlo, but Madrid now brings a different kind of pressure: a high-profile round against a Spanish teenager who is playing in his hometown and has already turned a breakout season into concrete results.
For Fonseca, the match is less about the rankings around him than the one number that has eluded him in Madrid so far — a second-round finish. For Jódar, it is a chance to turn a rapid rise into a signature win in front of a home crowd, against a player still trying to break through at a tournament that has repeatedly sent him home early.