Demon gets 'lucky' to secure Washington Open crown
The Australian men's No.1 fought gallantly to claim an enthralling contest in the US capital over fellow 26-year-old Alejandro Davidovich Fokina 5-7 6-1 7-6 (7-3), in just over three hours.
A workman-like tiebreaker capped off a week full of positives, and 10th career title, for de Minaur ahead of next month's US Open in New York, while Spaniard Davidovich Fokina fell just short of claiming his first ATP Tour title.
De Minaur, who lost in straight sets to Germany's Alexander Zverev in the 2018 Washington final, improved to a tour-leading 22 hard-court wins for the season.
The seventh seed consoled his devastated rival after the defeat and during the presentation ceremony told him that his maiden trophy wasn't far away.
Davidovich Fokina missed out on two championship points in Delray Beach this February and lost the Acapulco final in March.
"You're way to good to not have one of these (trophies). It's coming for sure," de Minaur said to his opponent.
"You deserved it today. I just got lucky. You are a hell of a competitor, a hell of a player. No one on the tour wants to play you. This is not the end, this is only going up for you."
The Spanish 12th seed was broken early in the opening set but responded immediately for 2-2. He gained the advantage again in the 11th game before serving it out.
It lit a fire under the Aussie, who raced through the second set in just 36 minutes, winning 6-1.
But de Minaur dropped serve to trail 4-1 in the decider, before breaking back when Davidovich Fokina was serving for the title at 5-4.
He scrambled from 0-30 and on his opponent's third match point a desperate lob clipped the sideline and helped de Minaur turn the point and final around.
De Minaur will return to world No.8 on the back of reaching the final.
"It's something about this court. I did it in 2018 ... and honestly, I just kind of knew I could do it," said the Aussie, who saved four match points against Andrey Rublev that year but lost in the decider.
"I just backed myself and I told myself to commit no matter what and if I lost this match it was going to be on my terms. Today it went my way. I've had a couple of brutal ones not go my way, so I'm glad this one went my way."
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
24 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Granderson: Of course the Lakers' 2020 win counts as a real championship
It's been quite the summer for Lakers jealousy, hasn't it? For example, in July, Bleacher Report left Kobe Bryant — the fourth-leading scorer in NBA history — off its Top 10 all-time player list. In June, when the Buss family sold the franchise to Mark Walter for a historic $10 billion, Lakers haters immediately took to social media to say which teams were worth more. Now we are in August, and every NBA TV show and podcast has a segment to address the comments Philadelphia 76ers executive Daryl Morey made to the Athletic about the Lakers' 2020 NBA championship against the Miami Heat: 'Had the Rockets won the title, I absolutely would have celebrated it as legitimate, knowing the immense effort and resilience required.… Yet, everyone I speak to around the league privately agrees that it doesn't truly hold up as a genuine championship.' Given the historic circumstances of the COVID-19 pandemic that year, to view that championship as 'less than' because teams did not travel during it and fans were not present is akin to discounting NFL championships or World Series titles won during World War II because the rosters were thinner because of enlistments. Morey suggested that victory should come with an asterisk as if the playoffs during a once-in-a-century global pandemic were not as challenging as in typical years. Different dynamic, yes — but easier? He has since walked his comments back, but you know what they say about genies and bottles. Besides, it's not as if he's alone in his Lakers disrespect. There are plenty of fans and former players who are quick to point out what the team did not do in that postseason because they don't appreciate what that championship required. Beginning with courage. It's been nearly five years since the Lakers won title No. 17 inside the $200-million logistics behemoth referred to as the Bubble, so maybe some of us forgot the details. Infectious disease experts, the Walt Disney World Resort in Orlando, the league office, the players' union, ESPN and many other corporations all came together during a time when we had far more questions about COVID than answers. From when NBA play stopped in March 2020 to when play inside the Bubble began that July, the country had lost more than 140,000 people to the disease. When bubble play ended in October, it was above 206,000, and many cities were running out of places to store the dead. Far too often we forget that fame and fortune do not protect a person from problems or heartache. We forget that being a professional athlete does not protect you from the rest of the shared human experience. All-Star center Karl-Anthony Towns lost his mother to COVID that April and seven other relatives over the course of the pandemic. Towns, who turns 30 in November, was himself hospitalized in early 2021 because of the virus. You're not supposed to put an asterisk on a sports championship won during the worst of times. You're supposed to use an exclamation point to honor the mental and emotional dexterity it took. The months of isolation — away from family and friends, away from the routines that made them the athletes they are. Daily testing to guarantee the safety of other players as well as coaches and administrative staff. And while not having to travel to a hostile arena nullified the 'road game' in the playoffs, it also took away 'home court' from a Lakers team that had the best record in the Western Conference. A team that had just beat the other two title favorites — the Milwaukee Bucks and the Los Angeles Clippers — less than a week before the world shut down. One day, Morey is going to look back on his comments about the Lakers title in the Bubble with shame. Not because he's wrong in reporting the disrespect others in the league have expressed but because he chose to give that rhetoric oxygen. Morey and others have long had such jealousy of the Lakers, but this was the summer they turned petty. YouTube: @LZGrandersonShow If it's in the news right now, the L.A. Times' Opinion section covers it. Sign up for our weekly opinion newsletter. This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.
Yahoo
24 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Padel could come to Rotherham under new plans
The dedicated padel tennis centre could open in Rotherham under new plans submitted to the council. The application to transform a vacant industrial unit in Hellaby would see several indoor padel courts built alongside a small cafe and bar. The Lawn Tennis Association (LTA) has supported the proposal, describing the development as a "fantastic attribute for the Rotherham area". The LTA said there were currently no padel courts in Rotherham and praised the facility's potential to boost participation in what it calls the "fastest-growing sport in the world". Padel is a racket sport that combines elements of tennis and squash, played on a smaller enclosed court, and is designed to be more accessible and sociable than traditional tennis. The site, Unit 1, Sandbeck Way, is currently a vacant truck park and distribution warehouse which dates back to the 1970s, according to the Local Democracy Reporting Service. According to the applicant the building is no longer viable as a warehouse due to modern demands and structural limitations and has stood vacant since 2023. The applicant said the centre would create up to 12 jobs, including roles for padel coaches, cleaning and maintenance staff, and a full-time site manager. Parking provision would be expanded from the existing 14 spaces to a minimum of 37, with an additional 14 overspill spaces available at the nearby Trinity House unit. Eight parking bays would be equipped with electric vehicle charging points. It would operate from 7am to 10pm on weekdays and 8am to 9pm at weekends. The application is currently under consideration by Rotherham Council's planning department. Listen to highlights from South Yorkshire on BBC Sounds, catch up with the latest episode of Look North Related stories New padel centre aims to 'improve city's health' Sports centre with padel court proposed for city


Washington Post
26 minutes ago
- Washington Post
Trump wants the Commanders to revert to their old name. Here's its history.
The world barely noticed in July 1933 when George Preston Marshall, the owner of the NFL's Boston Braves, announced his fateful decision to rename his team the Boston Redskins. The name would stay when Marshall relocated his team to Washington four years later, and eventually outlast Marshall, who died in 1969. It was pulled only in 2020.