Jakub Mensik Beats Sebastian Baez to Win Auckland Classic Title

Jakub Mensik captured the Auckland Classic title with a composed 6-3, 7-6 victory over Sebastian Baez in the final. The 20-year-old Czech saved three consecutive set points during a tense second-set tiebreaker to secure the win. This victory makes him the youngest champion at the tournament since Juan Martin del Potro in 2009. Mensik will now rise to a career-high World No. 17 as he prepares for the Australian Open.

Key Points: Mensik Wins Auckland Classic, Youngest Champ Since 2009

  • Mensik wins 6-3, 7-6
  • Saves 3 set points in tiebreak
  • Youngest Auckland champ since 2009
  • Rises to World No. 17
  • Heads to Australian Open next
2 min read

Mensik beats Baez to clinch Auckland crown

Czech star Jakub Mensik defeats Sebastian Baez in straight sets to claim the Auckland Classic crown, becoming the youngest winner since del Potro.

"Mensik saved three consecutive set points from 3/6 in the second-set tie-break before claiming a championship-match triumph. - ASB Classic reports"

Auckland, Jan 17

Jakub Mensik clinched the Auckland Classic title after defeating Sebastian Baez 6-3 7-6 in the final, producing another composed performance to cap an outstanding week at the tournament.

The final match lasted for one hour and 22 minutes but could have gone for much longer had Baez taken one of the three set points he had during the second set tiebreaker.

The 20-year-old Czech saved three consecutive set points from 3/6 in the second-set tie-break before claiming a championship-match triumph at the hard-court ATP 250.

Mensik produced a high-class serving performance to become the youngest Auckland champion since Juan Martin del Potro in 2009. He became the fifth youngest ever winner of this title, and this is his second title, following his triumph in Miami last year.

Mensik got a break in the sixth game in the opening set of the final and never looked like relinquishing that lead.

In the second set Baez was down 15-40 at 5-5, having double-faulted twice. He saved those two breakpoints but gave Mensik a look at another breakthrough two points later, and this time he wasn't able to get himself out of trouble, putting a low ball into the net, ASB Classic reports.

Mensik's serve had looked impenetrable before he had the opportunity to serve for the match in the next game. However, this time it let him down, and Baez was able to get the break to send the set into a tiebreaker.

Baez held a 4-2 lead at the change of ends and went on to have three set points, but Mensik saved them all, drilling a return on the last of them as he got the score to 6-6.

Baez missed a volley to give Mensik a match point on the Czech's serve, but after a long rally the Argentine planted a backhand into the net.

An ace on the next point gave Mensik another set point, and this time Baez went too long with a backhand.

Mensik, who defeated Novak Djokovic to lift his only previous tour-level trophy at the 2025 Miami Open, will on Monday rise one spot to No. 17 in the ATP Rankings as a result of his Auckland title run.

The Czech will now head to Melbourne to prepare for his first-round Australian Open encounter against Pablo Carreno Busta.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

S
Sarah B
As a tennis fan in India, it's refreshing to see new young champions emerge. The serve-and-volley game seems to be making a comeback. Baez will be gutted about those missed chances, but that's sport. Great tournament overall!
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Priya S
Mensik's mental strength is his biggest asset. To come back from 3/6 down in the tie-break shows champion mentality. Our Indian players could learn a thing or two about handling pressure at crucial points. Well done to the young Czech! 👏
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Rohit P
Good win, but let's be honest, the level of competition in ATP 250 events isn't the same as the Masters or Slams. The real test for Mensik will be maintaining this consistency against the top 10 week in, week out. Still, a promising start to the year for him.
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Kavya N
Exciting to read! Waking up to tennis news from New Zealand/Australia is a January ritual. The article says he's the youngest champion since Del Potro in 2009... that's some prestigious company. Hope he has a long, injury-free career ahead.
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Michael C
The detail about the double faults and break points saved is what makes tennis so tense and beautiful. Baez's unforced error on that final backhand... that's the fine margin at the top level. Great reporting on the match flow.

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