Canadian King: Auger-Aliassime Defends Montpellier for Canadian-Record 9th Title

By Richard Pagliaro | Sunday, February 8, 2026
Photo credit: Occitanie Open

Felix Auger-Aliassime is peerless beneath the ceiling.

Today, Auger-Aliassime rose up to become Canadian king in Montpellier.

The top-seeded Auger-Aliassime won the final five points in a row topping Adrian Mannarino 6-3, 7-6(4) to successfully defend his Montpellier title and make majestic history in the process.

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It is Auger-Aliassime’s ninth career crown—most by any Canadian man in the Open Era—including his eighth indoor championship. Auger-Aliassime broke the Canadian championship record he shared with former world No. 3 Milos Raonic, who officially retired last month.

The victory vaults Auger-Aliassime, who dropped serve only once in the tournament, to No. 6 in the rankings.

“We’re an individual sport, but there’s a lot of people behind me both here and at home,” Auger-Aliassime said afterward. “I’m not fully French, but I do speak French and I feel really welcome here. Thanks to the crowd here for the support. I always feel it in France and it’s a pleasure for me.”

The 25-year-old Auger-Aliassime leads all ATP players in indoor wins this decade (89) and knocked off three Frenchmen in a row—sixth-seeded Arthur Fils, qualifier Titouan Droguet and Mannarino—becoming the second man to successfully defend Montpellier since Richard Gasquet in 2015-2016.

On this day, Auger-Aliassime, who retired from his Australian Open opener vs. Nuno Borges due to cramping, served 78 percent, cracked 13 aces against 1 double fault and did not face a break point. over his last two matches, Auger-Aliassime hammered 33 aces against only 1 double fault.

In a scorching start, Auger-Aliassime stormed through eight straight points backing up the love break with a shutout hold for 2-0.

Commanding the center of the court, the top-seeded Canadian cracked crosscourt forehands and even banged his backhand down the line. Auger-Aliassime won three of the first six games at love.

Reading the wide serve, Auger-Aliassime rocketed a forehand return crosscourt breaking at 15 to seize the first set bookended by breaks.

The oldest finalist in tournament history, the 37-year-old Mannarino fended off three match points edging compatriot Ugo Humbert in round today.

The 70th-ranked Frenchman stayed in step on serve through the first eight games of the second set.

Showing explosive athleticism, Auger-Aliassime soared for a smash capping another love hold with a bang for a 5-4 lead.

The crafty Mannarino was sliding his lefty serve wide on the ad side displacing the Canadian and creating court space for his forehand down the line. Facing championship point at 4-5, Mannarino crossed Auger-Aliassime up playing to his favored forehand to erase match point, eventually holding to level at 5-all.

Credit Mannarino for successive backhand volley winners, including a sweet high backhand volley angle, that helped him hold to force the tiebreaker.

In the breaker, Mannarino’s slightly mis-hit return created an acute angle that sent Auger-Aliassime scurrying wide. Mannarino flattened a forehand down the line for the mini break and a 3-2 lead. Mannarino slid the wide serve for a 4-2 lead, however that was the veteran Frenchman’s final stand.

Auger-Aliassime carved a running defensive slice that stayed low then he swooped in and fired a forehand pass to get the mini break back at 3-4.

The 2025 US Open semifinalist slashed his 13th ace out wide for a 5-4 lead. Auger-Aliassime won an ensuing 19-shot rally for two more championship points.

Dancing around his backhand, Auger-Aliassime drilled a diagonal forehand, stepped in and slammed a forehand winner down the line to seal a 95-minute triumph.

A joyous Auger-Aliassime jumped high above the court.

The man nicknamed Felix Le Cat erupted in a celebratory scream to punctuate his ninth career championship, including his eight indoor title.

Richard Pagliaro is Tennis Now Managing Editor. He is a graduate of New York University and has covered pro tennis for more than 35 years. Richard was tennis columnist for Gannett Newspapers in NY, served as Managing Editor for TennisWeek.com and worked as a writer/editor for Tennis.com. He has been TennisNow.com managing editor since 2010.

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