Cummins' tense exchange with umpire over run-out attempt

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The Age
39 minutes ago
- The Age
Perfect 10: Demon recovers from brink of defeat to win title
When the going gets tough, Alex de Minaur gets tougher. The Australian became a 10-time champion on the ATP Tour on Monday (AEST), recovering from 5-2 down in the final set of the Washington Open final to outlast childhood rival Alejandro Davidovich Fokina 5-7, 6-1, 7-6 (7-3) in another performance packed with mental resilience. De Minaur saved three separate championship points in a nerve-jangling, 14-minute service game at 4-5, including a defensive backhand lob that barely touched the sideline on the third of them. He never trailed in the tie-break – but twice handed back mini-break leads – before sealing victory after three hours and two minutes of tense and absorbing tennis that owed to repeatedly brave shot-making in the toughest moments. Loading De Minaur is now only one career title behind Australian greats Patrick Rafter and Mark Philippoussis. He is the fifth Australian to win in Washington, with Nick Kyrgios the most recent in 2019 and 2022. 'I don't know [how I did that]. It's something about this court. I did it in 2018 against [Andrey] Rublev, and honestly, I just kind of knew I could do it,' de Minaur said. 'I just backed myself and told myself to commit, no matter what, and if I lost this match, it was going to be on my terms, and today went my way. I've had a couple of brutal ones not go my way, so I'm glad this one [did]. 'I'm very happy with where I am at the moment, [and] how I'm dealing with things on and off the court. I had the mindset that even if today didn't go my way, it was a very positive week, so I was proud of my efforts, no matter what, but, geez, it feels good to hold my 10th title.'

Sydney Morning Herald
39 minutes ago
- Sydney Morning Herald
Perfect 10: Demon recovers from brink of defeat to win title
When the going gets tough, Alex de Minaur gets tougher. The Australian became a 10-time champion on the ATP Tour on Monday (AEST), recovering from 5-2 down in the final set of the Washington Open final to outlast childhood rival Alejandro Davidovich Fokina 5-7, 6-1, 7-6 (7-3) in another performance packed with mental resilience. De Minaur saved three separate championship points in a nerve-jangling, 14-minute service game at 4-5, including a defensive backhand lob that barely touched the sideline on the third of them. He never trailed in the tie-break – but twice handed back mini-break leads – before sealing victory after three hours and two minutes of tense and absorbing tennis that owed to repeatedly brave shot-making in the toughest moments. Loading De Minaur is now only one career title behind Australian greats Patrick Rafter and Mark Philippoussis. He is the fifth Australian to win in Washington, with Nick Kyrgios the most recent in 2019 and 2022. 'I don't know [how I did that]. It's something about this court. I did it in 2018 against [Andrey] Rublev, and honestly, I just kind of knew I could do it,' de Minaur said. 'I just backed myself and told myself to commit, no matter what, and if I lost this match, it was going to be on my terms, and today went my way. I've had a couple of brutal ones not go my way, so I'm glad this one [did]. 'I'm very happy with where I am at the moment, [and] how I'm dealing with things on and off the court. I had the mindset that even if today didn't go my way, it was a very positive week, so I was proud of my efforts, no matter what, but, geez, it feels good to hold my 10th title.'


7NEWS
39 minutes ago
- 7NEWS
Alex de Minaur hailed for classy act immediately after winning epic Washington Open final
Australian Alex de Minaur has been hailed for a classy gesture immediately after winning the Washington Open final in extraordinary circumstances. De Minaur miraculously saved three championship points before defeating Alejandro Davidovich Fokina 5-7 6-1 7-6(3) to capture one of the biggest titles of his career. The seventh seed came back from 2-5 down in the deciding set and saved match points on his own serve at 4-5. Davidovich Fokina was in tears after the match as he struggled to comprehend how he failed to win. As the shattered Spaniard sat on his bench, De Minaur came over and consoled his beaten opponent. He can be seen saying words of encouragement to his rival and putting his arm around his shoulder. Fans quickly praised De Minaur for the move. 'Not sure what you can even say in this moment if you're Alex, but consoling him like this literally makes my heart happy,' one fan said. 'What a guy! Alex,' another said. 'Demon is a class act,' another said. 'All class from Demon. Heartbreaking for ADF for another finals loss. Positive takeaway for ADF is it's only a matter of time till he wins his first career title!' another said. Davidovich Fokina looked set to win the match earlier in the third set, but de Minaur produced his trademark scrambling with an incredible passing shot that came after a miraculous lob that landed right on the line. Seventh seed de Minaur, who lost in straight sets to Germany's Alexander Zverev in the 2018 Washington final, improved to a tour-leading 21 hard-court wins for the season by beating Frenchman Corentin Moutet in the semis. On Monday (AEST), Davidovich Fokina, 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 in 66 minutes. It lit a fire under the Aussie, who went up 3-0 in the second and broke again to take it to a third set. But he dropped serve for 3-1 in the decider, before breaking back when Davidovich Fokina was serving for the championship at 5-3. The 'Demon' went on to claim a breaker littered with unforced errors by his opponent. De Minaur will return to the top 10 in the rankings after reaching the decider. His 42 wins at ATP 500 level since the start of the 2023 season is the most by any player on tour.