
Beaten Aussie James Duckworth declares opponent Alexander Bublik will lose to Alex de Minaur at French Open
Alexander Bublik is a bit different. Alexander Bublik likes serving underarm. Alexander Bublik likes feigning to serve underarm. Bored, Alexander Bublik will go over and untie the chair umpire's shoelace.
He'll drop-shot you from a mile behind the baseline. He'll hit a winner past you with his racquet handle. He'll tell you he hates playing on clay than blast you away with a barrage of aces and ludicrous winners. Then sometimes, he'll look like he doesn't care two hoots.
So, of course, Alex de Minaur knows to expect the unexpected when he meets the delightfully crazy Kazakh in his second-round date at Roland-Garros.
Yet, as unpredictable as he is, there is an absolute predictability about the outcome, reckons James Duckworth, the Aussie who was blown away by a Bublik barrage in the opening round.
'Demon will win,' asserts Duckworth, matter-of-fact, despite losing 6-2, 6-4, 6-4.
Why so certain? 'Well, he's got one of the best return of serves in the world and he's lighting quick, so he's going to get to a lot more drop shots than I did.
'Then from the back, Demon wins most of the points. The weather's not overly hot, it's not playing particularly quick, so Bublik's gonna have to hit lines to win.'
What's it like playing someone like Bublik? 'Well, it is unpredictable. Like you've got to be ready for everything,' said Duckworth.
'You go into the match knowing that there could be underarms, there could be, like, a drop shot from an obscure position, that he could just hit and come in randomly. That's his style, and that's worked for him.'
It sounds straightforward enough but ninth seed de Minaur has noted just how Bublik's form has improved ominously of late, with the world No.62 coming off a Challenger triumph in Turin a couple of weeks ago, before on Monday dismissing Duckworth with 16 aces and 41 winners.
'Extremely dangerous,' mused de Minaur.
'Unpredictable. He takes the racquet out of your hands. He's obviously not going to want to hang in too many rallies, he's going to try and have short points and break my rhythm.
'I've got to be both ready mentally to expect anything and everything, and also make sure I'm ready physically from the very first point to the last.'
Andrey Rublev has a touch of the wild Bublik temperament too, but he plays on a more elevated level - he's been as high as No.5 in the world and is currently at 15 - and represents the challenge of Brisbane player Adam Walton's fledgling pro career in the second round.
The Russian is great mates with his friend from junior days Daria Kasatkina, who's now thrown her lot in with Australian tennis and will face an examination from Frenchwoman Leolia Jeanjean and, doubtless, the raucous crowd supporting their home wildcard on Court Suzanne Lenglen.
Women
(17) Daria Kasatkina v Leolia Jeanjean (FRA)
Men
Adam Walton v (17) Andrey Rublev (RUS)

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2 hours ago
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Popyrin makes Aussies smile in Paris after Demon exit
Alexei Popyrin has ensured there was no hangover from Alex de Minaur's early exit as he got hot on a baking Paris day to reach the last-16 of the French Open with a touch of swagger and a sprinkling of good old-fashioned Aussie grit. The country's No.2 player isn't now just the last man standing in the draw but the last man positively thriving as he downed quality Portuguese Nuno Borges 6-4 7-6 (13-11) 7-6 (7-5) in the Court 14 furnace at Roland Garros to reach the last-16 on Friday. Ultimately, he may have perhaps made harder work of it than he should but after a tough three-hour duel, 25th seed Popyrin still hasn't dropped a set yet in the championships. The second time in the fourth round at a grand slam, Popyrin joins an illustrious list 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). 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The country's No.2 player isn't now just the last man standing in the draw but the last man positively thriving as he downed quality Portuguese Nuno Borges 6-4 7-6 (13-11) 7-6 (7-5) in the Court 14 furnace at Roland Garros to reach the last-16 on Friday. Ultimately, he may have perhaps made harder work of it than he should but after a tough three-hour duel, 25th seed Popyrin still hasn't dropped a set yet in the championships. The second time in the fourth round at a grand slam, Popyrin joins an illustrious list 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 the big serving Popyrin as he produced a strikingly impressive opening behind his powerful delivery, dropping just three points behind it in the opening set -- but from then on it got more complicated. The Sydneysider seemed in complete control when he broke Borges again in the middle of the second set, his serve still ticking along nicely, but from that point, he found it tough to seal the set. He had a set point on Borges' serve at 3-5 which was repelled, then twice served for the stanza only to produce his first two really error-prone games. It came down to who could hold their nerve best in a dog-fight of a tiebreak. Borges earned a couple of set points and Popyrin four more, before finally on the sixth attempt to wrap it up after 72 minutes, he profited from the Portuguese finally crashing a backhand long. Popyrin's relief was palpable and the pressure cranked up on Borges, who found himself having to save two match points at 4-5 before dragging the match into another tiebreak. Popyrin powered into a 6-2 lead in the tiebreak only for Borges to doggedly save three more until the No.25 seed finally delivered one more irretrievable serve to prevail in just a minute over three hours. It sets up an even more difficult date in the fourth round for the 25-year-old against Russian 24th seed Karen Khachanov or American 12th seed Tommy Paul, who were locked in a five-set battle on Court Simonne-Mathieu. Alexei Popyrin has ensured there was no hangover from Alex de Minaur's early exit as he got hot on a baking Paris day to reach the last-16 of the French Open with a touch of swagger and a sprinkling of good old-fashioned Aussie grit. 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The courts hardening and speeding up in the sunshine certainly suited the big serving Popyrin as he produced a strikingly impressive opening behind his powerful delivery, dropping just three points behind it in the opening set -- but from then on it got more complicated. The Sydneysider seemed in complete control when he broke Borges again in the middle of the second set, his serve still ticking along nicely, but from that point, he found it tough to seal the set. He had a set point on Borges' serve at 3-5 which was repelled, then twice served for the stanza only to produce his first two really error-prone games. It came down to who could hold their nerve best in a dog-fight of a tiebreak. Borges earned a couple of set points and Popyrin four more, before finally on the sixth attempt to wrap it up after 72 minutes, he profited from the Portuguese finally crashing a backhand long. Popyrin's relief was palpable and the pressure cranked up on Borges, who found himself having to save two match points at 4-5 before dragging the match into another tiebreak. Popyrin powered into a 6-2 lead in the tiebreak only for Borges to doggedly save three more until the No.25 seed finally delivered one more irretrievable serve to prevail in just a minute over three hours. It sets up an even more difficult date in the fourth round for the 25-year-old against Russian 24th seed Karen Khachanov or American 12th seed Tommy Paul, who were locked in a five-set battle on Court Simonne-Mathieu. Alexei Popyrin has ensured there was no hangover from Alex de Minaur's early exit as he got hot on a baking Paris day to reach the last-16 of the French Open with a touch of swagger and a sprinkling of good old-fashioned Aussie grit. 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