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Alex De Minaur Finally Snaps Top 10 Losing Streak
Main photo credit: Geoff Burke-USA TODAY Sports

Alex De Minaur is a top-10 player who remains near his career high of No. 6 in the world. Yet the 26-year-old Australian is still on the outside looking in at the game’s true elite. With six Grand Slam quarterfinals but no semifinals, and—prior to Thursday—sixteen consecutive ATP losses to top-10 opponents, the final step has remained out of reach.

De Minaur’s Painful Losing Streak

De Minaur’s inability to reach a Grand Slam semifinal has been tied directly to his struggles against top-10 players, the very opponents who stand between him and a breakthrough at the majors. Despite posting 55 match wins in 2025 (and 50 in 2024), those victories rarely came against the sport’s best. This season alone he went winless in meetings with Jannik Sinner (0–3 including at the Australian Open), Carlos Alcaraz (0–2 including the Tour Finals), Lorenzo Musetti at the Tour Finals, Novak Djokovic at Wimbledon, Ben Shelton in Canada, and Andrey Rublev in Doha.

De Minaur has speed, feel, and sharp point construction, but the lack of physical power has long been the separator. The gulf between the top five players and De Minaur has looked like a chasm he simply couldn’t cross.

It’s fitting that his maiden top-10 win came in 2019 against Kei Nishikori at the US Open—another undersized player who maximized every tool he had.

While many of his biggest results have come at home in favorable Australian conditions, he did claim a standout clay-court win over Daniil Medvedev at the 2024 French Open, a match that showcased his underrated ability on the surface.

De Minaur’s tennis has always been built on consistency over highlight-reel moments—but he has made clear that he wants more.

Tour Finals Redemption for De Minaur

De Minaur endured a difficult debut at the 2024 ATP Tour Finals in Turin, pushing Taylor Fritz to a third set before being overpowered by Daniil Medvedev and Jannik Sinner on quick indoor courts.

Returning to the same venue in 2025, he again started slowly, fading late in a 7-6(5), 6-2 loss to Carlos Alcaraz. Lorenzo Musetti then edged him 7-5, 3-6, 7-5 in a match De Minaur let slip from a third-set lead. With one final chance—and needing help from Alcaraz—De Minaur had to beat Fritz, the same player who beat him a year earlier. This time he delivered a composed, resilient performance to win 7-6(3), 6-3.

Despite looking dejected throughout the tournament, De Minaur proved how quickly things can turn in tennis when he finally broke his bad luck against Fritz.

A Clean Slate Semifinal Awaits

De Minaur continues to deliver for Australian men’s tennis. Only John Newcombe and Lleyton Hewitt have reached the last four of the Tour Finals, and he now has 20 career wins over top-20 opponents.

After everything he’s weathered this season, he enters the semifinals playing with “house money.” He is likely to face Jannik Sinner, a player who holds all the matchup advantages—power, weight of shot, and a dominant head-to-head. But De Minaur can swing freely, knowing he has nothing left to prove in 2025.

The odds are steep in his next match, making it a true clean-slate opportunity to go all-out for a massive upset. Regardless of the result, he will return home to Australia to start the 2026 season with renewed confidence. The Australian fans will rally behind him once again, and the breakthrough win over Fritz may be exactly what he needed to breathe, play liberated tennis, and finally push past those quarterfinal barriers at the 2026 Australian Open.

This article first appeared on Last Word On Sports and was syndicated with permission.

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