De Minaur's French Open run falls at the hands of German star (2024)

The Paris dream is over for Alex de Minaur, his hopes of reaching the French Open semi-final ground into the Roland Garros clay-court dust by the relentless Olympic champion Alexander Zverev.

The first Australian man into the quarter-finals since Lleyton Hewitt two decades ago, de Minaur's improbable adventure came to a halt in his first prime-time night slot on Court Philippe Chatrier as the towering German prevailed 6-4, 7-6 (7-5), 6-4.

De Minaur was far from disgraced in a straight-sets defeat at the end of a glorious breakthrough Roland Garros adventure in which he had proved he could live with the best, even on his least productive surface.

But ultimately, Zverev proved too strong as he took his record against the Australian to 8-2.

It was a singular effort from Zverev, who had been embroiled in two exhausting five-setters in his last two matches and been on court four hours longer than the Aussie.

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But there was no sign of weariness, nor of any distraction from outside events with his trial for the alleged assault of an ex-partner still going on in Germany.

De Minaur attacked, never giving Zverev a moment of peace as he tried to rush him out of his comfort zone.

But the Olympic gold medallist was every bit as tough as the lightning Aussie, who never stopped fighting, even breaking back when the German was serving for the match at 5-3.

It proved a magnificent tie from the start, as a blistering 25-stroke rally ended by a de Minaur drop-shot winner set the tone in the second game.

But there were a host of them, some extraordinary exchanges, such as the second-set epic in which de Minaur leapt in the air only to miss Zverev's lob but still had the speed to scuttle back, retrieve the ball and ultimately dig out the point.

Cheered on again by his new French teenage 'superfan' Paul — decked out in a replica of 'Demon's' NSW blue kit — there was plenty of resilience from the 25-year old early on, but aggression was clearly his modus operandi.

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He battled back from an early break down to level up with a couple of breathtaking low backhand volleys and an extraordinary running lob.

But one dismal service game at 3-3 effectively cost him the opening set, a couple of careless backhand errors compounded by a double fault gifting the key break.

In the breezy conditions, serving was problematic for both players as double faults led both to getting broken in the second stanza.

De Minaur had his big chance at 6-5, when another lovely lob earned him set point, but Zverev was resilience personified, not only rescuing the game but the coming down from 4-0 in the tiebreak to earn a set point himself after outlasting the Sydneysider in another amazing 39-shot rally.

A shattered de Minaur then hit a forehand long, recognising that he would have to pull off the first comeback from two sets down in his career.

Another break in the sixth game of the third set, again ending with a double fault, looked fatal to de Minaur's chances of being the first Australian man into the Roland Garros semis since Pat Rafter in 1997.

He broke back with a fabulous drop volley, only for Zverev to crank up the pressure again to break de Minaur for a fifth time and seal victory in just under three hours.

Re-live all the action in our live blog below.

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Live updates

Thank you and farewell

By Kyle Pollard

Thanks for joining me this morning, it's been great to dip my toes into the tennis world for a little bit and I'm grateful for everyone being here.

My man Mick Doyle is on deck this morning to blog the Australia v Oman clash in the T20 World Cup, while Dean Bilton will be around tonight for the AFL.

Also don't forget to tune into the ABC Sport Tennis Podcast with Catherine Murphy, John Millman, and John Alexander.

Thanks again and have a great day!

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Semi-finals all sorted

By Kyle Pollard

So that result has us all sorted for the French Open semi-finals, and it's been an interesting run to here, particularly in the women's draw.

Gauff and Swiatek face-off tonight from 11pm (AEST) before Paolini and Andreeva just after midnight.

Men's times are yet to be decided but we'll have Zverev and Ruud, and Sinner and Alcaraz as the changing of the guard really takes full swing.

Praise for Alex

By Kyle Pollard

Agreed Chris. Awesome performance from the Demon and he's still young.

Excited to see what he's got ahead of him.

Zverev breaks back and claims the match

By Kyle Pollard

Alex de Minaur's French Open run is over.

He'll be disappointed to go down in straight sets, but the 25-year-old really took it up to the 27-year-old in patches and showed exactly why there's so much excitement about him.

Zverev now goes through to play Casper Ruud for a spot in the final, while the Carlos Alcaraz and Jannik Sinner match looks like it should be an absolute belter.

De Minaur breaks back! He's still alive!

By Kyle Pollard

It's difficult to figure out if the stadium is chanting 'Aussie' or 'Alex' or something similar in French that my very simplistic mind doesn't know, but one thing is clear - this crowd is behind Alex de Minaur.

He breaks back in stunning fashion and keeps things interesting! Real fighting spirit.

There's now a wave going around the crowd. Which is a bit odd.

De Minaur keeps his serve this time

By Kyle Pollard

The Australian doesn't drop a point this time and now Zverev is serving for the match.

Zverev holds after facing break point

By Kyle Pollard

The story of the morning for de Minaur.

He has the break point, but some wonderful movement from Zverev sees him chase a cheeky little one from de Minaur and forces it back to deuce.

He eventually takes advantage and then sees it out to keep his break away from the Australian.

On another note, this bloke in the crowd has kept my attention all morning. I'm no Parisian fashionista, but he does look like he should be at the T20 World Cup.

De Minaur's French Open run falls at the hands of German star (1)

Zverev gets the break

By Kyle Pollard

It's going to be tough back from here.

De Minaur double faults and hands the German the break.

The Aussie looks tired. A couple of times it's looked like he's had a little limp. Hopefully he's not injured.

De Minuar holds in a nervous one

By Kyle Pollard

He looked composed early but Zverev fights back to get it to deuce.

But the Australian is still moving well and uses that movement to get Zverev into awkward positions.

Crucial hold.

Zverev holds in a clinical game

By Kyle Pollard

The German looks like he's in the zone right now.

He eases his way through that one, and everything de Minaur is trying is just coming back at him with twice as much power.

He's going to need something special from here to keep his French Open hopes alive.

De Minaur holds

By Kyle Pollard

Again, a lovely touch shot from de Minaur to end that one.

He drops two points on the way there but makes it look reasonably easy.

Zverev grabs a new racquet. There is some tension there between the two players around time wasting, but de Minaur is the one keeping his cool.

Zverev holds serve to start the third

By Kyle Pollard

And he does it with a lovely passing shot.

It was de Minaur with the touch early, but Zverev is finding the shots he was missing earlier.

Zverev claims the second set

By Kyle Pollard

That was spectacular.

De Minaur had the early break at 4-0 in the tiebreak, but the German fought back in stunning fashion.

A 39-shot rally at 5-5 sees Zverev claim it at the net with desperate work, forcing de Minaur into a lob he wasn't in a position to take, and it goes wide.

The Aussie had his opportunities in that one with a set point, and then led 5-3 in the tiebreak, but he falls short.

Zverev turns to the crowd and puts his hand to his ear. It feels like a taunt to me.

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Zverev saves the set point

By Kyle Pollard

We go to a tiebreak as Zverev saves a set point in a game that went about seven or eight minutes.

The German also gets a time warning for how long he's taking to serve. It does feel long from here, and the chair umpire eventually grows impatient.

Zverev has a small blow up about it, but he holds his cool in a tense situation.

De Minaur holds in spectacular battle!

By Kyle Pollard

Oh that was stunning from the Demon!

At 30-15 Zverev lobs the Australian, who misses the desperate attempt over his head running backwards. But he recomposes and does a 180 turn, and gets the ball back over the net with a deft touch.

He wins the point and eventually claims the game to hold.

Electric from the crowd favourite!

And Zverev holds

By Kyle Pollard

De Minaur is playing the more electric tennis, but Zverev is just doing what he needs to do.

Strong serve hold then from the German.

A clinical hold from de Minaur

By Kyle Pollard

The Australian finishes that one off with his first ace of the match.

He dropped just the one point, and that came after a desperate streak to get to the ball that almost saw him pull off the impossible.

A big service game from Zverev coming up here.

Zverev holds - but nervously

By Kyle Pollard

De Minaur gives Zverev a lot to think about during the one.

It ends with a cracking rally, and it's clear who the crowd is behind on this one.

They're chanting de Minaur's name in the hottest of moments, and it has to be giving him a lift.

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And now the Aussie holds

By Kyle Pollard

Frustration is building for Zverev and he's back at it, yelling at his mates in the crowd.

De Minaur looks cool and calm in comparison and is moving incredibly well around the court.

De Minaur's French Open run falls at the hands of German star (2024)
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