Medvedev Crashes Out in Aus Open Upset; De Minaur Powers Into QF

Daniil Medvedev suffered a stunning fourth-round defeat, falling in straight sets to American Learner Tien in a one-sided match. Medvedev's serve was ineffective as Tien dominated, winning 11 consecutive games at one stage. Meanwhile, Australian hope Alex de Minaur delivered a commanding performance to defeat Alexander Bublik and reach the quarterfinals. De Minaur now faces a formidable challenge against world No. 1 Carlos Alcaraz in the next round.

Key Points: Medvedev Upset, De Minaur Wins at Australian Open

  • Medvedev loses in straight sets
  • Tien wins 11 games in a row
  • De Minaur cruises past Bublik
  • Quarterfinal clash with Alcaraz next
2 min read

Aus Open: Medvedev crashes out; De Minaur prevails into QF

Daniil Medvedev suffers a shocking straight-sets loss to Learner Tien at the Australian Open, while Alex de Minaur advances to the quarterfinals.

"It marked one of Medvedev's earliest exits at the season's first Grand Slam in recent years."

Melbourne, Jan 25

Daniil Medvedev's Australian Open campaign came to a shocking end on Sunday as the world No. 11 was knocked out in the fourth round by 25th seed Learner Tien in straight sets.

The Russian struggled to find his rhythm throughout the contest and went down 4-6, 0-6, 3-6 in a one-sided encounter that lasted just over an hour. It marked one of Medvedev's earliest exits at the season's first Grand Slam in recent years.

After posing some challenge to Tien in the first set, the second one proved particularly disastrous for Medvedev, who failed to win a single game as Tien reeled off 11 games in a row at one stage. Despite a brief resistance in the third set, Medvedev could not halt the momentum as the American closed out the match with authority.

Medvedev was unable to cope with Tien's aggressive play and consistency on return. While the Russian managed six aces, his overall effectiveness on serve was well below par, winning just 58 per cent of points on his first serve and a poor 33 per cent on his second.

With this defeat, Medvedev exits the tournament far earlier than expected, while Tien continues his impressive run in Melbourne, reaching the quarterfinals of a Grand Slam for the first time in his career. He will now face world No.3 Alexander Zverev in semi final.

Meanwhile, home favourite Alex de Minaur played another watertight match to get a top-10 win over Alexander Bublik on his way to the Australian Open quarterfinals for the second successive year.

De Minaur made the most of Bublik's struggles on first serve early on before cruising through a surprisingly one-sided match 6-4 6-1 6-1.

The world No.6, who could become the first Australian men's singles champion at the Melbourne major since Mark Edmondson in 1976, next faces world No.1 Carlos Alcaraz, who beat Tommy Paul earlier on Sunday.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

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Priya S
So happy for Alex de Minaur! 🇦🇺 As an Indian tennis fan, I love seeing players from other countries break long home-title droughts. The pressure on him to be the first Aussie men's champ since 1976 must be insane. Hope he gives Alcaraz a tough fight!
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Aman W
Respectfully, the article focuses a lot on Medvedev's failure, but give Tien his due! The man won 11 games in a row against a top player. That's champion mentality. Sometimes we in India also focus too much on the big names falling rather than the new talent rising. Well done, Learner Tien!
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Sarah B
The stats tell the story. 33% on second serve is a disaster at this level. You can't win a Grand Slam with that. His head just wasn't in the game today. On another note, the De Minaur vs Alcaraz QF is going to be fire! 🔥
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Vikram M
This is why sports are great – unpredictable! Watching from Mumbai, these upsets make the tournament so exciting. Hope an Indian can make a similar deep run someday. De Minaur's consistency is impressive, he's like a wall on the court.
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Nikhil C
Straight sets loss in just over an hour for a top seed... ouch. The Australian Open always has these surprises. The heat and conditions in Melbourne are a different beast. Maybe Medvedev wasn't fully prepared. Onwards and upwards for him.

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