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‘Deflated’ Demon crushed after Alcaraz’s brilliance

    Alex de Minaur cut a dejected figure in his post-match press conference, admitting to feeling deflated after Carlos Alcaraz ended in Australian Open run in a 7-5, 6-2, 6-1 domination.

    Alcaraz had never reached the semi-finals of the AO prior to this match but has now booked a blockbuster clash against last year’s finalist Alexander Zverev.

    “Simply a sensational match,” Todd Woodbridge said on Nine.

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    Carlos Alcaraz celebrates his win.  AP

    Post-match, de Minaur was asked how he felt in the context of the vast improvement he’d made compared to past tournaments.

    “It doesn’t feel amazing, I’ll tell you that,” he said.

    “You try to do the right things, you try to keep on improving, but when the results don’t come or the scoreline doesn’t reflect those improvements, then of course you feel quite deflated, I would say.”

    Coming into the match, de Minaur looked like he’d had his best preparation yet to progress past a quarter-final at a grand slam for the first time.

    However, Alcaraz was clinical, starting every set 3-0.

    The first set suggested there was promise as he managed to claw back momentum to make it 3-3.

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    Alcaraz broke again and made it 5-3 before de Minaur pegged it back to 5-5.

    The Spaniard then ran away with the first set, although de Minaur had reason to be bemused in the final game.

    On the first point the Aussie was given a time violation for his serve but Alcaraz approached the umpire and took the blame.

    The violation was revoked but it appeared to upset de Minaur’s rhythm as he trailed 0-40. He defended the three break points but couldn’t do it again when Alcaraz had the advantage.

    Alcaraz’s class was too much for de Minaur but the stats suggested he wasn’t as bad as the score read.

    The Spaniard finished with 32 unforced errors to de Minaur’s 29. Alcaraz had four more aces than de Minaur but three more double faults too.

    Winners was his big difference, hitting 26 against the Aussie’s 16.

    “Alex de Minaur was playing the best tennis of his career here yet he had no way of feeling comfortable in consecutive points,” Woodbridge said post-match.

    “He’d play a brilliant point and then had to bounce back and do it again.”

    During his press conference, de Minaur was asked if he’d do his preparation differently having played at the United Cup and an exhibition match against Alcaraz.

    His response could be mistaken as frosty, but more simply looked like a man out of answers.

    “I don’t know. What could I do differently? You tell me,” he replied.

    The journalist politely responded “I don’t know. I was just asking”.

    Alex de Minaur in his press conference. Australian Open

    De Minaur continued: “The schedule is what it is. I either play the first week of the year or I don’t, so I don’t know how I could change my prep too much.”

    “It’s either I don’t play the first week of the year or I play it.

    “I don’t think today was lack of preparation. As I said, I’ve been playing at an incredibly high level. It’s just you come up against someone like Carlos in the night time and it’s tough to find the right answers when you are playing against him.”

    MOMENTS THAT MATTERED AS DEMON LOST GRIP

    * The following is AI-generated ‘What If’ analysis that examines the most pivotal points in the match. It was provided courtesy of Infosys

    What if Alex de Minaur had kept that desperate cross-court forehand inside the lines at 5-5 in the opening set, somehow redirecting Alcaraz’s wicked drop volley back into play after that lung-burning sprint to the net?

    The Australian had clawed his way back from the abyss—down 0-3, he’d summoned three consecutive games to level the set, riding a wave of hometown energy that threatened to drown the young Spaniard.

    Rod Laver Arena was electric, sensing blood in the water, and de Minaur stood on the precipice of something extraordinary. But tennis is a sport measured in centimetres and milliseconds, and that forehand—sailing wide by inches— became the first domino in a cascade of cruel mathematics.

    Instead of planting seeds of doubt in Alcaraz’s mind, de Minaur watched the Spaniard hold serve with surgical precision, then faced the impossible task of serving to stay in the set at 5-6.

    The twelfth game became a monument to de Minaur’s warrior spirit—and its ultimate futility. Three break points saved. Three times the Australian refused to fall. But the fourth proved fatal, a cross-court backhand pushed 2.24 metres wide by Alcaraz’s brilliant angled return, and suddenly the set was gone: 7-5 to the Spaniard.

    The physical toll was already mounting — de Minaur had covered 2,197 meters of hard court, launched 22 desperate sprints, while Alcaraz seemed to glide effortlessly through the Melbourne night. In the second set, at 15-30 on Alcaraz’s serve, de Minaur executed the perfect approach shot, charged the net with predatory intent, only to watch his volley die in the tape. That millimetre—the difference between 15- 40 and 15-30—became the difference between pressure and escape, between hope and inevitability.

    By the third set, de Minaur’s legs had become his enemies. At 4-1 down, he saved two break points with the desperation of a man fighting for his tournament life. But the third break point was one too many, and the 5-1 scoreline fell like a guillotine. The final game lasted just five points—no deuces, no drama, no miracle. Alcaraz closed it out 6-1, and de Minaur was left to wonder about the butterfly effect of a single forehand at 5-5, a volley that caught the tape, a backhand pushed wide by inches.

    In the cruel arithmetic of grand slam tennis, the margin between quarterfinal heartbreak and semifinal glory can be measured in moments—and on this night in Melbourne, every pivotal moment belonged to someone else.

    wwos.nine.com.au (Article Sourced Website)

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