Sometimes the tennis gods have a twisted sense of humor. Here’s Felix Auger-Aliassime, a guy who’d lost seven of eight previous meetings to Andrey Rublev, walking into Arthur Ashe Stadium as the underdog against the 15th seed. But tennis, like life, has a funny way of flipping the script when you least expect it.
Auger-Aliassime didn’t just beat Rublev on Monday – he dismantled him like a mechanic taking apart an old engine. The final score line of 7-5, 6-4, 6-3 tells only part of the story. Those 42 winners compared to Rublev’s measly 22? That’s the real narrative here.
The Canadian looked like he’d been saving up all his frustration from those previous losses and decided to unleash it in one spectacular afternoon. You could almost feel the weight lifting off his shoulders with every crushing forehand winner.
By the second set, Rublev was doing what Rublev does best when things go sideways – taking his anger out on innocent tennis equipment. The racquet destruction at the end of the second set was basically his white flag moment, even though there was still a full set to play.
It’s hard to blame the guy. Watching Auger-Aliassime serve up 13 aces while committing just four double faults probably felt like watching someone else drive your dream car better than you ever could.
This quarterfinal appearance marks Auger-Aliassime’s deepest Grand Slam run since the 2022 Australian Open – a drought that probably felt like a decade in tennis years. The 25-year-old admitted afterwards that this moment feels “much better and more deserved” than his first trip to these heights.
There is something beautifully human about that admission. The injuries, the confidence struggles, the nights wondering if you’ll ever get back there – it all makes this victory taste sweeter.
Up next? A quarterfinal date with Australia’s Alex de Minaur, who made quick work of Swiss qualifier Leandro Riedi. It is a matchup that should favor the more experienced Auger-Aliassime, especially with this kind of momentum behind him. The question now isn’t whether Auger-Aliassime belongs in the big moments – it’s whether he can stay here for good.
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