Day twelve at the 2025 Shanghai Rolex Masters produced one of the most extraordinary finishes in Masters 1000 history as qualifier Valentin Vacherot completed his fairytale run by defeating cousin Arthur Rinderknech 4-6, 6-3, 6-3 to capture his maiden ATP title.
From qualifying rounds to holding the trophy aloft, Vacherot’s week has been nothing short of miraculous. Ranked outside the top 200 at the start of the tournament, the 26-year-old Monegasque becomes the lowest-ranked Masters 1000 winner in history, and only the third qualifier ever to lift a trophy at this level.
After dropping the opening set, Vacherot once again showcased his resilience, following the same pattern that defined his run through the draw by turning the match around with precise, aggressive baseline play and near-flawless serving under pressure.
In a year dominated by Sinner and Alcaraz, Shanghai produced a once-in-a-generation story: a qualifier-turned-champion, and a Masters final contested between cousins that many casual tennis fans had not even heard of two weeks ago.
Day Twelve Shanghai Masters 2025 Final Result


| Winner | Loser | Scoreline |
|---|---|---|
| Valentin Vacherot (Q) | Arthur Rinderknech | 4-6 6-3 6-3 |
Quick Match Recap


Qualifier Valentin Vacherot completed a historic fairytale at the 2025 Rolex Shanghai Masters, rallying past his cousin Arthur Rinderknech 4-6, 6-3, 6-3 in a 2-hour, 11-minute final.
In the process, Vacherot has won his maiden ATP Tour title and become the lowest-ranked ATP Masters 1000 champion in history
He also became the third qualifier to win a Masters 1000 title (joining Roberto Carretero, Hamburg 1996, and Albert Portas, Hamburg 2001) and the fifth man to claim his maiden tour-level title at this level.
Perhaps it’s the fact that they are related, but both men have a very similar style of tennis; they serve similarly, have similar physical builds, and their groundstrokes also resemble each other.
Rinderknech dominated the opener with 12 winners and just two unforced errors, breaking in the third game with early-ball aggression.
You’d think that would wobble Vacherot, but he has been down a set six times in Shanghai and he shifted momentum in the second, keeping Rinderknech deep and dictating with first-strike groundstrokes.
When it came to the one-set shootout for the title, Vacherot delivered, creating 12 break points in the third and making just two enforced errors to get it done.
His win caps a week in which he recorded victories over Laslo Djere, Alexander Bublik, Tomas Machac, Tallon Griekspoor, Holger Rune, and Novak Djokovic. He’s up to 40th in the rankings (from 204) and has doubled his career prize money with $1,124,380 added onto the $594,077 he’d previously earned since 2015.
Match Stats
| Arthur Rinderknech | Valentin Vacherot | |
|---|---|---|
| Winners | 13 | 12 |
| Unforced Errors | 11 | 9 |
| Aces | 11 | 8 |
| Double Faults | 1 | 1 |
| 1st Serve % | 71% (63/89) | 68% (49/72) |
| 1st Serve Points Won | 68% (43/63) | 78% (38/49) |
| 2nd Serve Points Won | 56% (14/25) | 74% (17/23) |
| Break Points Saved | 79% (11/14) | 0% (0/1) |
| Service Games | 79% (11/14) | 93% (13/14) |
| 1st Return Points Won | 22% (11/49) | 32% (20/63) |
| 2nd Return Points Won | 26% (6/23) | 44% (11/25) |
| Break Points Won | 100% (1/1) | 21% (3/14) |
| Return Games | 7% (1/14) | 21% (3/14) |
| Pressure Points | 80% (12/15) | 20% (3/15) |
| Service Points | 64% (57/89) | 76% (55/72) |
| Return Points | 24% (17/72) | 36% (32/89) |
| Net Points | 95% (18/19) | 85% (11/13) |
| Total Points | 46% (74/161) | 54% (87/161) |
| Match Points Saved | 1 | 0 |
| Max Points in A Row | 5 | 8 |
| Total Games | 43% (12/28) | 57% (16/28) |
| Max Games in A Row | 3 | 5 |


