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ATP Australian Open Grand Slam

De Minaur embraces ‘49%’ quip, dominates Bublik and advances to seventh major quarterfinal

De Minaur accepted ‘49%’, demolished Bublik in straight sets and now meets top seed Alcaraz. Now on.

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A brief exchange about wedding planning with Katie Boulter became a running joke for Alex de Minaur during the Australian Open. After a third-round victory on Saturday, Jim Courier asked the 26-year-old about his role in planning. “Are you doubting me, Jim?” De Minaur replied. “I am,” confirmed the four-time major winner. “No, this is like a 50/50 relationship right,” continued De Minaur before being stopped by the master of on-court interviews. “You’ve not been married. You don’t know,” stated Courier. “You’re about to become a 49% shareholder of a really great company.”

Two days later De Minaur leaned into that characterization. He produced a commanding performance Monday inside Rod Laver Arena, defeating Alexander Bublik 6-4, 6-1, 6-1. After the match he left a succinct message on the camera lens: “49%,” it read. Boulter had earlier posted “51% shareholder” on her X account the day before, effectively co-signing Courier’s line.

On court, De Minaur was rarely troubled. He did not face a break point and won 51 percent of his return points. The Sydney native had lost his two most recent meetings with Bublik from winning positions, including a second-round loss from two sets up at Roland Garros in 2025. This time he closed decisively, taking 14 of the final 16 games to remove any chance of a Bublik comeback.

De Minaur described his frame of mind succinctly. “Of course going into this one, I kind of wanted my revenge. I knew what to expect and what I didn’t do right the first couple times,” he told press. The victory sends the Australian No. 1 into his seventh career major quarterfinal, a stage he has not yet passed. Doing so would require reversing a 0-5 record against top seed Carlos Alcaraz. “It does help out that I’m feeling quite fresh. It’s going to be a physical battle, right, because there are many, many things that Carlos does incredibly well on a tennis court, and one is making the rallies quite physical,” said De Minaur.

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ATP Masters Miami Open

Tommy Paul’s Camo, Collabs and the Quiet Work of Returning to Form

Tommy Paul blends outdoor life, a New Balance collab and a patient return to top-level tennis. Now..

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Tommy Paul has spent the early weeks of the season balancing a clear on-court mission with a life built around the outdoors and a pair of new shoes. “Being an outdoor kind of guy, I wear camo every single week if not every day,” Paul said, introducing the CT-Rally v2 “Outdoor Court” edition, his first colorway collaboration with New Balance.

“I think it’s the best-looking shoe on the market in tennis,” he said. Paul described New Balance as a partner that allows him style and expression. “They do what they want, and they do it well,” he told me. “They want to give me a platform to express myself and what I’m about.”

The apparel and equipment storyline sits alongside other outdoor projects. “It’s freedom, it’s meditation, but it’s also an escape,” Paul said of fishing and hunting. “Growing up in North Carolina, we’d be fishing every weekend I wasn’t playing in the summer. It was something I absolutely loved doing. I knew that, when I got older, I’d have that kind living where you go out there fishing, harvesting, and eating. It’s even cooler now because I’m in Florida and I can do it all year round.”

Paul also unveiled a partnership with Yellowfin Yachts, a new boat he enjoyed testing and joked about with peers. “That is so funny,” he said when I called it a “yacht.” He plans to travel in it, with the Bahamas on his short list.

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The on-court narrative is straightforward. The 28-year-old former No. 8 halted his 2025 season after the US Open because of a foot injury that surfaced at Wimbledon, and he returned ranked No. 23. He pushed Carlos Alcaraz at the Australian Open, reached a final in Delray Beach and cites Davis Cup qualifying alongside Ethan Quinn and Emilio Nava as a season highlight. “I’m really just focused on right now, getting everything sorted and everything locked in to play my best tennis. If I’m playing my best tennis, everything will work itself out. I’m not really too focused on a No. 3 spot, Top 5 or Top 10 spot. I’m more focused getting to a point where I can play my brand of tennis consistently, without too much lapse. That’s what separates the top guys from the rest: even on their worst days, they figure out how to win a match. I think that’s something I’m really focused on.”

Off court, Paul has launched the Kids Outdoors Foundation with fiancée Paige Lorenze and worked with a Hobe Sound school. “They had a little basketball court, so we set up some tennis nets and spent some time with the kids, taught them a little tennis.”

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ATP Masters Miami Open

Auger-Aliassime notches 200th hard-court win in straight-sets Miami opener

Felix Auger-Aliassime reached his 200th hard-court win with a 7-6(3), 7-5 victory in Miami. on Sat.

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Felix Auger-Aliassime began his Miami Open campaign with a hard-fought straight-sets victory, defeating Marton Fucsovics 7-6 (3), 7-5 at the Masters 1000 event on Saturday afternoon. The 25-year-old Canadian secured the milestone in a match defined by small margins and timely serving.

The win marked the 200th hard-court triumph of Auger-Aliassime’s career, moving his record on the surface to 200-115. It is a notable landmark in his progression on the ATP Tour and places him among the leading players of his generation on hard courts.

Auger-Aliassime’s achievement also has generational significance. He is the second man born in the 2000s to reach 200 hard-court wins at tour level, following Jannik Sinner. Sinner sits at 241-54 on hard courts after his opening victory in Miami today, giving context to the elite company Auger-Aliassime joins.

Saturday’s match against Fucsovics was competitive throughout. A first-set tiebreak swung Auger-Aliassime’s way 7-3, and he closed the match in the second set with a late break to seal the 7-5 finish. The result provides a positive start to his run at a Masters 1000 tournament where winning early matches is often crucial to deeper progress.

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The milestone underscores Auger-Aliassime’s consistency on the most common tour surface and highlights his capacity to win tight matches on big stages. As the Miami Open progresses, his form on hard courts will be watched closely by those tracking the season’s contenders.

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ATP Masters Miami Open

Alcaraz Sees His Younger Self in Joao Fonseca After Miami Victory

Alcaraz said Fonseca reminds him of his younger self after a 6-4, 6-4 Miami win He praised the teen.

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Joao Fonseca, the 19-year-old Brazilian, has now met the top two players on tour in the space of a month and on similar surfaces. He lost to Jannik Sinner at Indian Wells, 7-6, 7-6, and then fell to Carlos Alcaraz in Miami, 6-4, 6-4. Those results offered a clear lesson in the gulf that still separates a rising teenager from established champions.

Fonseca drew a sharp contrast between the two opponents he has faced. “I think Alcaraz has more arsenal than Sinner,” Fonseca said after his defeat at the Spaniard’s hands on Friday night. “Sinner is more like a robot that just kills the ball and does everything perfect.”

“Carlos, he can do everything. He can do with topspin, can fire the ball, he has good movement. Goes to the net. It’s more difficult to understand the game. He breaks a lot your rhythm.”

The match in Miami exposed particular vulnerabilities in Fonseca’s game. After a raucous welcome from the pro-Brazilian crowd, Fonseca started strong, but by the third game Alcaraz had already seized command. A sudden change in direction on a point forced Fonseca onto his slice backhand and opened a path for a return winner and an early break that Alcaraz would not relinquish.

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Alcaraz’s margin was reflected in the match numbers. He finished with 27 winners to Fonseca’s 13 and made 70 percent of his first serves, winning 80 percent of those points. Those figures underline how difficult it is to beat Alcaraz when his serve and aggression are functioning.

Alcaraz offered his read on Fonseca after the match. “There were some times that he made a winner from behind the baseline with a fluffy ball that I just sliced, that I caught like a moonball, and from behind the baseline he was able to make a winner,” Alcaraz said. “It feels like he can make a winner every, you know, from everywhere. And that’s impressive.”

“He reminds me a lot when I was his age and just coming up,” Alcaraz said of Fonseca. “He should, I would say, he should choose the better option. Sometimes he misses a few shots or sometimes he miss like a lot of easy balls because he doesn’t choose the right shots, the right, you know, the right ball in certain situations.”

Fonseca left Miami with clear takeaways: the intensity required against Sinner and the unpredictability and shot selection required against Alcaraz. Those lessons will travel with him into the clay season.

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