Alejandro Tabilo is ranked around ATP #35, a left-handed Chilean player born on June 2, 1997 in Toronto, Canada to a family of Croatian and Chilean heritage. He moved to Chile as a child and was raised in Santiago, where he developed his game on the hard courts and clay courts of the Chilean tennis system. He represents Chile internationally and has won ATP titles, establishing himself as the leading Chilean men’s player and a consistent presence inside the top 40.
The left-handed delivery gives Tabilo natural angles on serve that complement a game built around intelligent court positioning and solid groundstrokes. His forehand is hit with a compact swing that generates pace through timing, and his backhand is reliable enough to sustain rallies from the baseline without becoming a liability. He is not a power player in the mold of the biggest hitters on tour; he wins through placement, consistency, and the tactical advantages that left-handedness provides. Opponents who face left-handers infrequently find his angles uncomfortable, particularly on the return and in crosscourt exchanges.
His multicultural background is unusual on the ATP Tour. Born in Canada, of Croatian descent, raised in Chile, he carries three cultures into his tennis career. Chile has a proud tennis history; Marcelo Rios reached the ATP World No. 1 ranking in 1998, the first Latin American man to do so, and Nicolas Massu won Olympic gold in singles and doubles at the 2004 Athens Games. Tabilo adds to that legacy with a style that reflects the modern tour’s demand for versatility. His 2024 season was a breakthrough, with his first ATP 500 level victory at the Rome Masters, where he defeated Novak Djokovic in the second round.
Tabilo will compete at the 2026 Grand Slams: the Australian Open, Roland Garros, Wimbledon, and the US Open. Check Chile time to convert match schedules.