The Roar
The Roar

Advertisement

'What happened out there nothing to do with tennis': De Minaur's unusual response after Medvedev mauling

Autoplay in... 6 (Cancel)
Up Next No more videos! Playlist is empty -
Replay
Cancel
Next
5th September, 2023
0

Alex de Minaur has rued losing his legs after Russian ironman Daniil Medevdev ended the Australian’s US Open campaign with a signature fourth-round victory in New York.

De Minaur played some inspired attacking tennis early to raise hopes of an upset win before the third-seeded 2021 Open champion powered to a 2-6 6-4 6-1 6-2 triumph in oppressively hot conditions on Louis Armstrong Stadium.

Australia’s world No.13 had been bidding to make the quarter-finals at Flushing Meadows for a second time but couldn’t stay with Medvedev after dropping a tight second set.

“Ultimately, what happened out there was nothing to do with tennis,” de Minaur said.

“It was a little bit to do with just physicality. I had a lot of matches this whole summer without a lot of time off and rest, and it seemed to have caught up with me at this moment. 

“It’s probably the first time in my career that fitness let me down. It’s not something that happens. I back myself every day of the year.

“But with all the matches that I played, my schedule, everything, I got to this point and the small margins, small percentages, are pretty big at this stage and level of competition.”

Advertisement

De Minaur’s departure ends Australia’s participation in the singles, with the 24-year-old having to settle for a likely rankings rise to a career-high No.12 next Monday.

Runner-up in 2019 before denying Novak Djokovic a calendar-year grand slam sweep two years ago, Medvedev advances to an all-Russian quarter-final against eighth seed Andrey Rublev.

That didn’t look on the cards early against de Minaur, whose aggressive play had the former world No.1 rattled and made a repeat of his win over Medvedev in Toronto last month seem a distinct possibility.

De Minaur won nine of nine points rushing the net and broke Medvedev in the fifth and seventh games to steam through the opening set in 32 minutes.

But a spectacular tweener from Medvedev during a 34-shot winning rally sparked the Russian into action midway through the second set.

De Minaur had to fight off five break points to hold for 2-2 but couldn’t recover from 15-40 down serving at 4-5 as Medvedev levelled the match at a set apiece.

The Russian shifted up a gear in the fourth, overpowering de Minaur from the back with two more breaks to take a two-sets-to-one lead.

Advertisement

It was all but over when de Minaur dropped serve twice more in the fourth set as Medvedev surged to 5-1 before closing out the contest after two hours and 40 minutes.

“There was no lack of confidence to beat him. I knew what I had to do to hurt him and I showed it until my legs went away,” de Minaur said.

“And then suddenly I had to try and scramble, finding different ways of playing and you can’t do that against a player of the calibre of Daniil.”

Despite his exit, de Minaur is closing in on a top-10 ranking for the first time and remains a live chance of qualifying for the season-ending ATP finals in Turin. “I’ve had some great results and I probably could have been higher (in the rankings),” he said.

“There’s still plenty to go – Asia and Davis Cup now. I’m going to be taking the first week of Asia off. 

“I need some rest, and hopefully I’ll be able to finish the year strong. Top 10, Turin; that would be an ideal way to finish the year.” 

Advertisement

Keys breaks drought with Pegula upset

Madison Keys stunned has third seed Jessica Pegula 6-1 6-3 in an all-American clash on Arthur Ashe Stadium, reaching the US Open quarter-final for the first time since 2018.

In the last eight she will face Wimbledon champion Marketa Vondrousova, who overcame a rocky start to beat another American Peyton Stearns 6-7 (3-7) 6-3 6-2.

Keys crashed out of the first round at Cincinnati last month but appeared right at home on the New York hard courts, where she was runner-up in 2017, as she overwhelmed her opponent with 21 winners.

Pegula beat the 17th seed Keys in their only previous meeting last year and was considered as one of the  brightest home hopes after winning the Montreal title last month.

However, on Monday she lacked her usual firepower and finesse.

Advertisement

“I’ve had so many amazing moments in New York,” said Keys, who is playing in her 12th US Open main draw.

“Being able to at any moment come back from any difficult positions I’ve been in matches has been amazing.”

Keys, who counts Pegula as a close friend, pumped her fist in a subdued celebration as the top-ranked American dropped her serve again when she sent a forehand shot into the net on match point.

“It’s always tough having to play a friend… when we get on the court it’s all business,” she said in courtside interview. 

Ninth seed Vondrousova fell a set behind to Stearns but the American youngster won just five more games.

“I actually didn’t expect it after Wimby, there was a lot of pressure,” Vondrousova said in her postmatch interview. “Let’s see what happens next.”

Advertisement

There are few clues as to what might happen next for the 24-year-old Czech as she and Keys have never played each other before.

Defending champ Alcaraz eases into quarters

Carlos Alcaraz has wasted little time in seeing off Matteo Arnaldi to march into the quarter-finals at the US Open.

The defending champion and world No.1 was a comprehensive 6-3 6-3 6-4 winner inside Arthur Ashe Stadium.

The Italian 22-year-old did manage a break at the start of the third but it was quickly snuffed out as Alcaraz raced to victory in under two hours.

Unseeded Arnaldi, 61st in the world, put out Aussie Jason Kubler in the second round and British No.16 seed Cameron Norrie in the last 16, but Alcaraz was a different matter 

“I think the intensity from the beginning until the last ball pleased me,” said the 20-year-old Wimbledon champion.

Advertisement

“I played a really solid match, less mistakes, I played my game. I’m really happy with the performance.”

Jack Draper’s breakthrough run at the US Open also came to an end on Monday after a four-set defeat by Russian Andrey Rublev.

The British No.4, in the second week of a grand slam for the first time, fell 6-3 3-6 6-3 6-4 to eighth seed Rublev.

Draper, 21, has endured an injury-hit year and slipped from a ranking of 38, in January, to outside the top 100.

A shoulder problem saw him miss Wimbledon and also threatened his participation at Flushing Meadows.

© AAP

close