With just one Aussie woman left at the French Open, Alexei Popyrin has high hopes after making third round
New Australian Daria Kasatkina is the lone female alive at the French Open after Ajla Tomljanovic's defeat as Alexei Popyrin declared he can 'beat anybody' after powering into the third round with the draw now in his favour.
Popyrin, the boys' champion at Roland Garros in 2017, ended a six-year opening-round losing streak before taking down Chile's Alejandro Tabilo in straight sets and is riding all sorts of confidence going into his match with Portugal's world No.41 Nune Borges.
The draw has opened up for Popyrin, the 25th seed, after Borges took down two-time finalist Casper Ruud.
'I've always had that confidence. On my day I can beat anybody, but that's not important to me. What's important to me is bringing a consistent level day in, day out,' Popyrin said.
'That's what I've struggled with in the past.'
Popyrin was the first Australian into the third round with compatriots Adam Walton, Alex de Minaur and Kasatkina still to play their second-round matches.
But Tomljanovic, who took out fellow Aussie Maya Joint in the opening round, failed in her centre court appearance, losing with a double-fault to round out a lacklustre effort against No.4 seed Jasmine Paolin, going down 6-3, 6-3.
Tomljanovic, 32, conceded she didn't find her 'A game' when it mattered most but said she would leave Paris 'optimistic'
'It was a tough performance out there,' she said.
'My dad (coach Ratko) used to say 'we've got 12 more of those grand slams you can play'. And now I know it's not 12 anymore, the number is smaller.
'There were still moments where I played some good points, good games, and I definitely leave Paris feeling optimistic with happy memories again.'
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But it will start to get interesting next up when the record 25th grand-slam seeking Djokovic tackles last year's finalist, No.3 seed Alexander Zverev, who progressed when his Dutch opponent, Tallon Griekspoor, quit with abdominal trouble when 6-4 3-0 down. "He definitely knows how to play tennis. He definitely knows what it means to be on the big stage and to play big matches," Zverev said about Djokovic. "There is no doubt about that." Djokovic improved to 100-16 at the French Open, while Nadal, who retired at the end of last season, went an unbelievable 112-4 while winning 14 championships. "From now on I have the toughest draw in the tournament," Zverev said. "I'm looking forward to the battles ahead, and I'm looking forward to playing the best in the world." Alexander Bublik continues to write the most amazing and unlikely story at the French Open, making Alex de Minaur's defeat by the crazy Kazakh look better by the day. Bublik's second-round win over ninth seed de Minaur left the Australian bereft and in the mood for a spot of self-blame, but he found himself in good company on Monday when British hotshot Jack Draper, the fifth seed, also simply couldn't handle his demise by drop shot from the inspired world No.62. "I didn't know what to do," admitted a flustered Draper, who'd been compared physically to a UFC fighter by Bublik but who was pummelled into submission by his stringbean adversary's fabulous shot-making. "I have a certain skill set to play tennis, and it worked marvellously today. One hundred percent, one of the best days of my life and one of the best matches I have ever played in my life. As simple as that," said Bublik, who's reached the quarter-final . He had had everyone laughing the previous round when he explained how a "hangover" trip to Las Vegas had been his way of escaping the pressures off too much hard training, the sort indulged in by what he felt were athletic "robots". And the father of a young son was quick to double down after his win over Draper that he's not prepared to sacrifice everything to push his tennis life to new levels. "There's no way around hard work — don't get me wrong, I work hard — but on my terms. Will I put my life and health on the line to have a "might"? Maybe? No," he affirmed. "I will continue my path. I will work my way because I still practise, guys. I still do the exact minimum and maximum at the same time in order to be the player I am, to be in the position I am, and I will continue with this path because I think I prioritise tennis and life in equal ways." It sounds a refreshing approach but, frankly, he'll have to top even his recent miracles to down Jannik Sinner next as the Italian blitzed Andrey Rublev 6-1 6-3 6-4, making the world No.17 largely look like helpless fodder. He's not the first one to feel that way. The Italian has now marched to the last-eight without losing a set and for the loss of just 30 games. 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"From now on I have the toughest draw in the tournament," Zverev said. "I'm looking forward to the battles ahead, and I'm looking forward to playing the best in the world."