Alexander Blockx (born 8 April 2005) is a Belgian professional tennis player. He has a career-high ATP singles ranking of No. 101, achieved on 10 November 2025 and a best doubles ranking of No. 467, reached on that same date.[2] He is currently the No. 3 singles player from Belgium.[3]
Blockx was born in Antwerp, Belgium, to a Ukrainian family background. He started taking tennis lessons in his early childhood with Philippe Cassiers.[1][5][6]
Blockx had notable results on ITF junior circuit. In 2022, he reached the third round and then quarterfinals of major jr. events of that season, at Wimbledon and the US Open.[7]
Blockx made his ATP Tour qualifying debut at his national tournament, the 2022 European Open in his home town, Antwerp, where he was given a wildcard. He lost to Swiss Dominic Stricker in straight sets.[13]
He was also given a wildcard into the main draw of the doubles, playing alongside Ruben Bemelmans in what proved to be Bemelmans' last professional match.[14]
In March 2023, Blockx made his Masters 1000 qualifications debut after receiving a wildcard for the 2023 Miami Open where he lost to Yosuke Watanuki.[15][16]
Blockx received a wildcard for the qualifying competition at the Antwerp Open and qualified into the main draw on his ATP singles debut.[17] In his very first ATP Tour singles main draw match ever in his hometown, he lost to fifth seed Yannick Hanfmann in two close sets.[18]
Just a week after his first appearance in the ATP circuit, he won his first ITF title in Glasgow. And a week later, he remained unbeatable, he won his second title in Sunderland.[19] Partly due to his first qualification for an ATP tournament and winning two ITF titles, he entered the top 500 for the first time in his career on 6 November 2023.[20]
Blockx received a wildcard for the qualifying competition at the 2024 Australian Open. He also received a qualifying wildcard for the 2024 Miami Open but lost to Pedro Martinez in the first round. He reached a new career high ranking in the top 300 of No. 294 on 18 March 2024.[20]
In November, Blockx won his maiden Challenger title in Kobe, Japan defeating Jurij Rodionov in the final. He became the third youngest Belgian champion in Challenger history (after Libor Pimek and Olivier Rochus). En route to the title, he defeated for the first time a top 100 and home player Taro Daniel. As a result, he rose to No. 205 on 18 November 2024, which gave him a direct entry to the Grand Slam qualifying rounds.[21]
In January, Blockx won his second Challenger title in Oeiras, Portugal defeating Liam Draxl in the final. He became the youngest Belgian to earn multiple trophies at that level. As a result, he entered the top 150 in the singles rankings on 27 January 2025.[22][23]
Blockx made his Masters main draw debut at the 2025 Miami Open as a qualifier but lost to Corentin Moutet.[24]
In July, Blockx reached his third Challenger final at the Winnipeg Challenger, losing to Liam Draxl in the final.[25][26]
Blockx entered his second Masters 1000 main draw as a qualifier at the National Bank Open in Toronto.[27] Ranked at a career-high of world No. 119, achieved on 4 August 2025, Blockx also qualified for the main draw at the Cincinnati Open, where he recorded his first ATP Tour win by defeating Marcos Giron.[28] The result solidified Blockx fifth position in the NextGen Live Race to Jeddah.[29] Blockx won his second Challenger of the 2025 season at the 2025 Slovak Open, and moved to fourth in the NextGen race.[30][31] At the 2025 Moselle Open, Blockx received an entry through the Next Gen Accelerator programme and recorded his second tour-level win, defeating qualifier Francesco Passaro. As a result he moved up to world No. 101 in the singles rankings on 10 November 2025.[32][33]