
Aussie qualifier schools young gun Fonseca in Toronto
Schoolkate, son of a tennis coach, won his first match over a top-50 opponent on his sixth attempt as he dealt out the number 49 teenager from Brazil. The qualifier played a quarter-final this month in Los Cabos and won through qualifying for his spot in the Masters main draw.
"I'm very happy with the result," Schoolkate said. "I played a good match and made it tricky throughout.
"He's so young (18) but already an established player. I'm looking forward to my next match."
That will be against 2024 Canadian semi-finalist Matteo Arnaldi of Italy.
Schoolkate advanced with 10 aces among his 23 winners.
He caught Fonseca in a first-set tiebreaker and broke for a 2-1 lead in the second set on his way to victory in windy and quick court conditions.
"The conditions suit the way I play," he said. "I like to serve big and get forward to make things uncomfortable for the opponent."
The Aussie said he had given some thought to his potential top-100 breakthrough but is not stressing over any self-imposed deadlines.
"My goal now is to be in the top 100 but I'll just keep playing week-in, week-out, pushing hard and it will come," he said.
With seeds all receiving byes at the pre-US Open event, the supporting cast again dominated the programme.
American Mackenzie McDonald beat Belgian veteran David Goffin 6-4, 6-4 while Spain's Jaume Munar put out Canadian wild card Dan Martin with the loss of just three games.
"I've been improving my serve a lot," Munar said. "I'm putting more pressure on the baseline and my mindset is clear.
"I still need to be more aggressive to compete against the best ones, I'm going that more and more but I have a long way to go."
Munar next faces Czech Jiri Lehecka.
France's Hugo Gaston advanced when Italian opponent Mattia Bellucci quit injured, handing over a 3-6, 6-4, 2-0 win.
Australian Christopher O'Connell joined Schoolkate as a winner with his 6-1, 6-2 defeat of Taiwan's Tseng Hsin Chun.
World number three Alexander Zverev is the top seed of the expanded 12-day event, which will play its final on a Thursday instead of the more traditional Sunday.
ATP number one Jannik Sinner and second-ranked Carlos Alcaraz along with Novak Djokovic all withdrew with various injuries and fatigue issues prior to the tournament, which began only a fortnight after the Wimbledon final.

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