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Alex de Minaur leads Australian charge amid staggering 45-year first for Aussie tennis at US Open

De Minaur is one of 20 Aussies who will feature in the first round of the US Open.

Alex de Minaur will lead Australia's biggest contingent in almost half a century into this year's US Open. A record six Aussies have successfully qualified for the final grand slam of the season in New York, meaning a whopping 20 Australians - 12 men and eight women - will be in action in the singles main draws at Flushing Meadows, the same number as 1979 when Aussie tennis great Evonne Goolagong Cawley led the charge.

De Minaur and fellow seed Alexei Popyrin are among 10 men in the top 100 who gained direct entry into the singles draw alongside women's veterans Daria Saville and 2022 quarter-finalist Ajla Tomljanovic. Wildcards Tristan Schoolkate and Taylah Preston boosted the starting contingent to 14 before late-blooming Li Tu, teen Maya Joint, Arina Rodionova, Kim Birrell, Priscilla Hon and Destanee Aiava all won final-round qualifying matches on Friday to book their spots in the main draw.

Alex de Minaur pictured left and Alexei Popyrin right
Alex de Minaur will lead Australia's biggest contingent in almost half a century into this year's US Open. Image: Getty

It is the first time in US Open history that five Australian women have earned main draw berths through qualifying and the first time in 11 years Australia will have qualifiers in both the men's and women's singles at Flushing Meadows. Leading Aussie hope de Minaur, the 10th seed, will return to grand slam action after a hip injury ruled him out of his match against Djokovic in the Wimbledon quarter-final.

De Minaur then failed to recover in time to compete in the Olympic singles in Paris but will line up in the Ultimate Tennis Showdown event in New York this week as he looks to get some reps in ahead of the US Open. He is drawn to face World No.46 Marcos Giron in the first round. If he manages to get through the first round a qualifier will await him in the second round.

With 12 Australian men in the main draw for the final slam of the year - which kicks off on Monday - there was perhaps an inevitability that two would be drawn against each other. And that was the case with Max Purcell drawn to take on fellow Aussie Aleksandar Vukic.

There was a mix of draws for the Aussies for the final major of the season. Tough opening-round matches await for Thanasi Kokkinakis, Chris O'Connell, James Duckworth and qualifier Li Tu who are all drawn seeded players.

Kokkinakis will face Greece's Stefanos Tsitsipas, while O'Connell, Duckworth and Tu are drawn against Chilean 26th seed Nicolas Jarry, Italian Flavio Cobolli and Carlos Alcaraz respectively. The draw has been kinder for Alexei Popyrin, who is seeded at a Grand Slam tournament for the first time in his career.

MONTREAL, CANADA - AUGUST 07: Thanasi Kokkinakis of Australia celebrates a victory against Gael Monfils of France in the Men's Singles first round match during Day Two of the ATP Masters 1000 National Bank Open at Stade IGA on August 7, 2024 in Montreal, Canada.  (Photo by Minas Panagiotakis/Getty Images)
Thanasi Kokkinakis has received one of the harder Aussie draws, facing World No.11 Stefanos Tsitsipas in the opening round. Image: Getty

The 25-year-old will play Korean Soonwoo Kwon, who has been struggling with a shoulder injury and has won just two tour-level matches this season. Rinky Hijikata - who made the fourth round at Flushing Meadows last year - kicks off his 2024 campaign against Spaniard Alejandro Davidovich Fokina, a former world No.21 who has twice reached the fourth round at the tournament.

While in the women's, Daria Saville and Ajla Tomljanovic each face a qualifier in their opening matches. And 18-year-old Taylah Preston, who is making her US Open main-draw debut as a wildcard, will play the experienced Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova.

The qualifiers, however, have received horror draws. Destanee Aiava and Priscilla Hon both face top-five opponents, while fellow qualifier Kimberly Birrell meets Paris 2024 Olympic silver medallist Donna Vekic.

MELBOURNE, AUSTRALIA - JANUARY 17: Daria Saville of Australia and Ajla Tomljanovic of Australia react in their round one doubles match against Oksana Kalashnikova of Georgia and Maia Lumsden of Great Britain during the 2024 Australian Open at Melbourne Park on January 17, 2024 in Melbourne, Australia. (Photo by Darrian Traynor/Getty Images)
Daria Saville and Ajla Tomljanovic received kind first round US Open match ups, both drawn to take on qualifiers. Image: Getty

(10) Alex de Minaur v Marcos Giron (USA)

Jordan Thompson v Constant Lestienne (FRA)

Chris O'Connell v (26) Nicolas Jarry (CHI)

Rinky Hijikata v Alejandro Davidovich Fokina (ESP)

Aleksandar Vukic v Max Purcell

(28) Alexei Popyrin v Soonwoo Kwon (KOR)

Adam Walton v Alexandre Muller (FRA)

James Duckworth v (31) Flavio Cobolli (ITA)

Tristan Schoolkate v Taro Daniel (JPN)

Thanasi Kokkinakis v (11) Stefanos Tsitsipas (GRE)

Li Tu v (3) Carlos Alcaraz (ESP)

Tristan Schoolkate v Taro Daniel (JPN)

Daria Saville v Ena Shibahara (JPN)

Ajla Tomljanovic v Ann Li (USA)

Taylah Preston v (25) Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova (RUS)

Arina Rodionova v Wang Xinyu (CHN)

Maya Joint v Laura Siegemund (GER)

Kimberly Birrell v (24) Donna Vekic (CRO)

Destanee Aiava v (4) Elena Rybakina (KAZ)

Priscilla Hon v (2) Aryna Sabalenka

with AAP