Alexei Popyrin makes fourth round of French Open without dropping a set after downing Nuno Borges
Alexei Popyrin says he couldn't have imagined he'd end up as the last Aussie man standing at the French Open — but he's determined to keep the flag flying high after ensuring there would be no depressing hangover following Alex de Minaur's shock exit.
On a roasting Friday in Paris, the country's No.2 player got hot in the Court 14 furnace in which de Minaur's hopes had crashed and burned the previous day, downing doughty Portuguese Nuno Borges 6-4 7-6 (13-11) 7-6 (7-5) to reach the last-16 without having yet dropped a set.
"We all expected Demon to be in the fourth round," admitted Popyrin, when asked if he'd have thought at the start of the week he'd be the final men's survivor.
"I don't think I could have thought that — Alex is probably the most consistent player on tour — but that's the case now. I'm only focusing on myself. I want to keep going as far as I can, that's all I'm thinking."
And there's no reason that couldn't be very far.
Last year Popyrin reached the last-16 in the US Open, but now he has the chance to go even further in a slam as he faces American iron man, 12th seed Tommy Paul, who outlasted Karen Khachanov 6-3 3-6 7-6 (9-7) 3-6 6-3.
And though, ultimately, Popyrin may have made harder work of his win than he would have liked, the 25th seed still felt it was a major boon to have got the job done in three-straight in three hours, while Paul was slogging for 4 hours 7 minutes after another five-set slog in the first round which had lasted 3:38.
"It was a really good match from my point. Happy I wrapped it up in three sets. It's really hot out there, really difficult conditions," said Popyrin.
"I played the first set-and-a-half really, really solid, how I've been playing all week, but had a bit of a mental slip-up at the end of the second but managed to dig deep in the tiebreak.
"The third set was more a mental battle than a physical battle on my side trying to hold serve, and then trying to get opportunities on his return, which I had towards the end. But still managed to kind of keep my head and still play well in the tiebreak."
Popyrin now joins an elite group of his compatriots to have made it this far on the Paris clay since the turn of the Millennium alongside Mark Philippoussis (2000), Wayne Arthurs (2001), Lleyton Hewitt (2000-02, 2004, 2006-07) and Alex de Minaur (2024).
The courts hardening and speeding up in the sunshine certainly suited his big serving as Popyrin dropped just three points on his delivery in the opening set but he had a bit of an aberration near the end of the second.
He squandered a set point at 3-5 and twice served for the set only to deliver a couple of error-prone games — the only times he was broken in the match.
Eventually, he needed plenty of resolve in a dog-fight of a tiebreak, saving a couple of set points and having four more of his own repelled before the Portuguese finally crashed a backhand long.
Popyrin's relief was palpable. "It was very important. One-set all is a completely different ball game."
His serve was in formidable nick, generally, his 13 aces and 80 per cent success rate on his first delivery suggesting he's going to be hard work for Paul to subdue.
"He played unbelievable tennis there (in the Canadian Open last year). That's what he's capable of. He can take the racquet out of your hand sometimes," said the American.
"Hopefully, I can use the clay to my advantage and kind of slow things down a little bit."
AAP
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

News.com.au
17 minutes ago
- News.com.au
More than 1,100 migrants crossed Channel on Saturday: UK govt data
Some 1,194 migrants arrived in the UK after crossing the Channel in small boats on Saturday, a record for this year according to AFP counting from government data. It brings the overall number of migrant crossings this year to 14,808, an unprecedented figure despite several measures in place by the French and UK governments to curb the crossings. French coastal authorities said they also rescued nearly 200 migrants between late Friday and late Saturday. The latest crossings, which UK Defence Secretary John Healey described as "shocking", fall short of the all-time record of 1,300 migrants arriving on small boats in a day in September 2022. But they will still prove a headache for UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer, who has been at pains to toughen his rhetoric on irregular immigration amid pressure from the far right to slash migrant numbers. "We all want to end dangerous small boat crossings, which threaten lives and undermine our border security," the Home Office said in a statement on the latest arrivals. Starmer unveiled tough new immigration policies this month that include doubling the length of time before migrants can qualify for settlement in the country and new powers to deport foreign criminals. The raft of measures was widely seen as an attempt to win back support from voters and fend off threats from the increasingly popular hard-right Reform party. Separate legislation to tackle irregular immigration, called the Border Security, Asylum and Immigration Bill, is currently going through parliament. But Saturday's crossings will be a fresh blow. The overall figure of 14,808 crossings is the highest for the first five months of the year since records began in 2018, when the route into the UK first became popular. It also surpassed the record for the number of crossings in the first six months of the year -- which stood at around 12,900 in the first six months of 2024. - 'Shocking' - On Saturday, a total 184 people were picked up in four different rescue operations on the French coast, the maritime prefecture for France's Channel and northern region said in a statement. In one instance, the motor died on a boat carrying 61 people. In another, nine people on a boat called for assistance. According to an AFP tally of official figures, 15 people have died so far this year trying to cross the Channel, one of the busiest areas in the world for shipping. "Pretty shocking, those scenes yesterday," Healey told Sky News in an interview Sunday. "We saw the smugglers launching elsewhere and coming around like a taxi to pick them up," he said, adding that "Britain's lost control of its borders". France this year agreed to allow its police patrols to intercept migrants in shallow waters, but they cannot stop a boat once it is on its way. "We've got the agreement (with the French) that they will change the way they work," Healey said. "Our concentration now is to push them to get that into operation." Healey also told the BBC: "What we now need is to work more closely with the French to persuade them to put that into operation so they can intervene in the water, in the shallow waters, which they don't at the moment."


West Australian
32 minutes ago
- West Australian
Dasha's pre-match trash talk nothing to do with tennis
The war of words has started before their big French Open last-16 match - but with new Australian recruit Daria Kasatkina and her young friend Mirra Andreeva, the trash talk has nothing to do with tennis. It's all about the pair's 'vlogging' talent with the two of them delighted to wind each other up over their respective skills behind the camera and on the mike when they're working on Kasatkina's popular YouTube channel "What the Vlog". Giving its viewers an entertaining inside peek at the tennis scene, Kasatkina, who set up the channel with her figure skater girlfriend Natalia Zabiiako, has given her fourth-round opponent Andreeva the chance to film the odd item for them too. And it led to the opponents previewing their Paris clash on Monday with some unflattering banter about their respective media skills. Asked what she thought of Kasatkina as an interviewer, Andreeva responded amid some laughter: "I think she can improve." On hearing this, Kasatkina who had already joked "I hate her" about the uber-talented 18-year-old world No.6, doubled down in mock horror: "I was right. I hate her! "Well, Mirra is not the one to talk about it because actually she had opportunity to interview players in our Rome vlog, so she took the camera, and went to talk with someone in the players' restaurant. It was terrible! "Also, the filming skills were not on point, so she needs to learn." Then, they were keen to point out that, actually, this knockabout stuff was just the way they communicate with each other. "You know, we're just giving little s--t to each other all the time, just joking around," said Kasatkina. "We are very good with each other. We were having ice bath together right now a couple of hours ago after our (third-round) matches." When it comes to tennis, though, Kasatkina admits there's not much she can teach this soar-away French-based phenom Andreeva. "The only thing I'm helping her, it's to get on the vlog," Kasatkina said. "Honestly, Mirra, she's a very nice girl and an amazing player. We've been quite good with each other. I can even say that I think we are kind of friends. "She's super young and super talented, so she will achieve a lot of things." The two Russian-born players have practised regularly but only played once last October in a final in Ningbo, China, won by Kasatkina in three sets. "A big drama match," says the Australian, perhaps recalling how she ended up consoling the youngster, who was in floods of tears after letting a 3-0 lead slip in the final set. So what will she have to do to beat Andreeva? "I have to run a lot," she said. "Going to be long rallies. Mirra, she's not giving anything for free. You know, to get every point, I'll have to die on court. I'm ready for that."


Perth Now
34 minutes ago
- Perth Now
Dasha's pre-match trash talk nothing to do with tennis
The war of words has started before their big French Open last-16 match - but with new Australian recruit Daria Kasatkina and her young friend Mirra Andreeva, the trash talk has nothing to do with tennis. It's all about the pair's 'vlogging' talent with the two of them delighted to wind each other up over their respective skills behind the camera and on the mike when they're working on Kasatkina's popular YouTube channel "What the Vlog". Giving its viewers an entertaining inside peek at the tennis scene, Kasatkina, who set up the channel with her figure skater girlfriend Natalia Zabiiako, has given her fourth-round opponent Andreeva the chance to film the odd item for them too. And it led to the opponents previewing their Paris clash on Monday with some unflattering banter about their respective media skills. Asked what she thought of Kasatkina as an interviewer, Andreeva responded amid some laughter: "I think she can improve." On hearing this, Kasatkina who had already joked "I hate her" about the uber-talented 18-year-old world No.6, doubled down in mock horror: "I was right. I hate her! "Well, Mirra is not the one to talk about it because actually she had opportunity to interview players in our Rome vlog, so she took the camera, and went to talk with someone in the players' restaurant. It was terrible! "Also, the filming skills were not on point, so she needs to learn." Then, they were keen to point out that, actually, this knockabout stuff was just the way they communicate with each other. "You know, we're just giving little s--t to each other all the time, just joking around," said Kasatkina. "We are very good with each other. We were having ice bath together right now a couple of hours ago after our (third-round) matches." When it comes to tennis, though, Kasatkina admits there's not much she can teach this soar-away French-based phenom Andreeva. "The only thing I'm helping her, it's to get on the vlog," Kasatkina said. "Honestly, Mirra, she's a very nice girl and an amazing player. We've been quite good with each other. I can even say that I think we are kind of friends. "She's super young and super talented, so she will achieve a lot of things." The two Russian-born players have practised regularly but only played once last October in a final in Ningbo, China, won by Kasatkina in three sets. "A big drama match," says the Australian, perhaps recalling how she ended up consoling the youngster, who was in floods of tears after letting a 3-0 lead slip in the final set. So what will she have to do to beat Andreeva? "I have to run a lot," she said. "Going to be long rallies. Mirra, she's not giving anything for free. You know, to get every point, I'll have to die on court. I'm ready for that."