“More than feeling sorry for myself, I’m starting to look at it the other way – that it’s up to me to get him out of that zone and lift my level and show what I’m made of. That’s what’s helping me with these types of matches.”
Dual major semi-finalist and 2019 Open quarter-finalist Frances Tiafoe, who outlasted Argentine Francisco Comesana in four sets, is de Minaur’s next road block.
De Minaur leads their head-to-head 3-1, including a tight three-set win in Toronto last year.
“Frances is super dangerous. He’s playing well, got a lot of firepower [and] he’s a veteran,” the Australian No.1 said. “We’ve had some battles in the past. I wouldn’t expect anything other than an absolute battle against him. He seems to be locked in.”
Loading
Tiafoe, who is coached by Australia’s Mark Kovacs, is not only looking forward to facing de Minaur, but the opportunity to play in “the big house”, Rod Laver Arena.
“It’s earlier than both of us would like [to play each other], but I’m happy to play against him. It’s going to be fun, against all these fans,” Tiafoe said.
“I love playing on the big courts, and now is when the event really gets going. [There are] only tough and good matches ahead, and you have to rise to the occasion. He’s going to come for me; I’m going to come for him. Tennis is going to get their money’s worth.”
De Minaur wrestled his way back against Medjedovic with some exhaustive scrambling, stout defence and the type of mental toughness that his 22-year-old rival – viewed as Serbia’s great hope once grand slam legend Novak Djokovic eventually retires – is still searching for.
Medjedovic started the night on a mission to crush serves and groundstrokes with an obvious strategy to bully de Minaur and keep points short, which served him well for a set-and-a-bit.
But he was showing signs of stress early in the second set – and began venting his frustration at his team, complaining to the chair umpire and even gave a sarcastic thumbs up to the crowd after pro-de Minaur fans cheered a double fault.
De Minaur plays an off-balance backhand against Medjedovic.Credit: Getty Images
Medjedovic’s resistance had waned by the time de Minaur levelled the match at a set-all, but the break in play offered the rising Serb a chance to reset.
Instead, de Minaur claimed the first six points on resumption, which rapidly turned into a 4-0 buffer. By then, the final result was inevitable.
Loading
It remains to be seen whether de Minaur and Tiafoe will play during the day or in primetime under lights, but the Australian is prepared for either scenario.
“The way I look at this is the bigger matches are always going to be played at night, so if I want to go deep at this tournament, I need to play well in those types of conditions,” de Minaur said.
“I’m happy with the way I dealt with the conditions today. There were a lot of different conditions. We started with the roof open, and it was quite swirly, then all of a sudden, the roof closed, and it was an indoor match.
“I thought I handled all of that really well. It’s good to get that confidence boost that you’ve played a good match at nighttime as well.”
Read more of our Australian Open coverage
News, results and expert analysis from the weekend of sport are sent every Monday. Sign up for our Sport newsletter.





