De Minaur sets sights on Rafael Nadal

By News / Wire

Six months after being handed a grand slam lesson by Rafael Nadal, Aussie fighter Alex de Minaur is hoping to turn the tables on the Spanish great.

The 19-year-old Sydneysider dug deep to topple Swiss qualifier Henri Laaksonen in a five-set thriller on Wednesday night and book a spot in the Australian Open third round.

His next challenge is a Friday showdown with Nadal, who walloped the teenager 6-1 6-2 6-4 in their maiden meeting at Wimbledon last year.

“Whenever he steps out on court, he always has that presence. No one can take that away from him,” de Minaur said of the 17-time grand slam winner.

“I’ve just got to go out there, try to focus on my side of the court, generally just go out there, have fun. Hopefully take it to him.”

Seeded 27 after only cracking the world’s top hundred last June, de Minaur has enjoyed a meteoric rankings rise, and is on a seven-game winning streak that included his first ATP title in Sydney.

That run looked in danger when Laaksonen came from two sets down to force the round-two match into a deciding set.

But de Minaur rallied for a 6-4 6-2 6-7 (9-7) 4-6 6-3 triumph in three hours and 52 minutes.

While compatriots Nick Kyrgios and Bernard Tomic have attracted negative headlines after round-one Melbourne Park exits, de Minaur has garnered support with his fighting spirit.

“Every time I step out on court, I leave 150 per cent out there. That’s the bare minimum,” he said.

“You want the players in the locker room to know you as that kid that fights ’til the end, has that never-say-die attitude.”

De Minaur is still getting used to the spotlight that comes with being Australia’s top-ranked male player but says he keeps a low-key routine.

“I still go have an acai bowl in the morning. I do the same things a 19-year-old kid would do.”

“I’m very fortunate to be in the position that I am, to be able to play the sport that I love every single day. I’m never taking that for granted.”

Nadal has knocked out Aussies James Duckworth and Matthew Ebden without dropping a set en route to the third round and said he wouldn’t be taking his younger opponent lightly.

“He’s a great player, young, playing with big confidence after winning matches. It will be a tough one,” the 31-year-old said.

De Minaur, who spent time growing up in Spain, said he recalled watching Nadal win his sole Australian Open on television in 2009.

“I think this is what you play for, to play the biggest guys and the best guys at the top of their level on the biggest stages,” he said.

The Crowd Says:

2019-01-18T02:54:12+00:00

clipper

Roar Rookie


You can still have hope and encouragement even if the reality is that he'll be lucky to snag a set. Very fast, great at retrieving, but I can't see him unsettling Nadal unless he is below par. Should give him an indication of where he is and needs to be to compete with the top 5.

2019-01-18T00:54:35+00:00

Oblonsky‘s Other Pun

Roar Guru


I don't think Alex will win. It's just silly in professional sport to write anyone off, especially when they are on a 7 tour level win streak.

2019-01-18T00:47:52+00:00

Reesy

Roar Rookie


Well I’ll look silly if Alex wins and you can throw eggs at me. Good luck to him!

2019-01-18T00:42:54+00:00

Oblonsky‘s Other Pun

Roar Guru


Actually, it's entirely different - getting injured and being injury-free but lacking match fitness are entirely different in my eyes.

2019-01-18T00:34:24+00:00

Reesy

Roar Rookie


Good luck to Alex - I’ll be rooting for him. He’s a breathe of fresh air for Australian tennis. Your point though that Nadal is returning from a serious injury and lacks match fitness and not dissimilar to mine about Nadal getting an injury isn’t it?

2019-01-17T08:12:46+00:00

Clanger McClunk

Guest


Come on Reesy give some sort of encouragement for the young bloke. Sure he has next to no chance of beating Nadal but if you are an Aussie at least get behind him. De Minaur is what a real Aussie is all about. He said he wants to be known as the kid that never gives up, a stark contrast to two other local players.

2019-01-17T04:15:59+00:00

Oblonsky‘s Other Pun

Roar Guru


Not really though. De Minaur is a top 30 player on a 7 match win streak against a Nadal that is returning from a serious injury and who lacks match fitness. Nadal is often also upset by lower ranked players outside of Roland Garros. Is Alex likely to win? Of course not. Is it possible if he plays well? Of course.

2019-01-16T18:49:03+00:00

Reesy

Roar Rookie


The only hope De Minaur has against Nadal is if Nadal sustains an injury.

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