Alex de Minaur left devastated as bizarre move raises eyebrows in Australian Open loss
Tennis fans were all saying the same thing after Andrey Rublev's extraordinary turnaround.
Questions are being asked about what Andrey Rublev's team put in his drink bottle at the end of the third set to spark such an extraordinary turnaround in his win over Alex de Minaur at the Australian Open on Sunday night. De Minaur had just taken the third set in a tie-breaker for a 2-1 lead and appeared to have way more in the tank than his opponent.
Rublev headed off court for a toilet break at the end of the set, and when the Russian returned he looked a completely different player. The World No.5 appeared to make a decision not to engage in long rallies with de Minaur, but to stand and deliver winners wherever he could.
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The change proved a masterstroke as Rublev fired off winner after winner with his huge forehand, going on to leave de Minaur devastated in a 6-4 6-7 (5-7) 6-7 (4-7) 6-3 6-0 thriller. Even with Rublev suffering from what appeared to cramp in the fifth set, de Minaur had no answers to the firepower of his opponent.
The dramatic turnaround also came after Rublev's team were spotted hastily pouring something into a drink bottle for him at the end of the fourth set, which commentators suggested was salt. A salty drink is a remedy for cramping, and Rublev's team were likely preparing for their man to start feeling the effects of the marathon match.
They’re so chaotic pic.twitter.com/8G6BJ4Tgir
— Krista (@BwehRublev) January 21, 2024
But the level of play that Rublev displayed after he received the drink had Aussie fans reaching for their tin foil hats. Many were left wondering if it was just salt that his trainer put in the bottle, and while there is no suggestion of wrongdoing from this publication, it certainly raised a few eyebrows on social media.
Nah. Nope. One of the best and most competitive matches in the whole tournament. Rublev can barely move. Out of nowhere, his team starts scrambling to put “salt” in his water before the 5th set? Then, he manages to bagel Alex. I’m not buying it at all. #AO24 #AusOpen
— No Prospects (@_NoProspectsPod) January 21, 2024
Thought I was the only one that saw that and now he’s gone from dead tired to fired up…
— No Prospects (@_NoProspectsPod) January 21, 2024
Someone should check the so called salt satchels that Rublev’s team puts into his drinks. Not a good look.
— Paul Day (@pauljday) January 21, 2024
Not Australians now trying to find conspiracy theories 😭😭😭😭😭😭
— Krista (@BwehRublev) January 21, 2024
Someone needs to investigate the "salt" Rublev had before this set
— Advit (@advitwake) January 21, 2024
I want some of that salt he's having... #Rublev #ausopen
— James Cakebread (@jimmycrumbler) January 21, 2024
Gosh I wish Roy and HG's Bludging on the Blindside was broadcasting - I'd love to hear what they made of Rublev's comeback after the salt packets in the water bottle #AustralianOpen
— Nick (@NickIBIS) January 21, 2024
Ain’t no way that’s salt that was given to Rublev. Bro really turned all the way up for the 5th set.#AO2024
— Jonderic (@Jonderic) January 21, 2024
It's unlikely that Rublev's team would have been so open and brazen about their actions if they were doing anything untoward. It sparked memories of when Novak Djokovic's team tried to conceal a substance they put into his drink bottle at the Paris Masters in 2022, which only made things look even more suss.
Speaking on Eurosport afterwards, American legend John McEnroe reckoned de Minaur had simply been beaten by a man playing "one of the greatest fifth sets I've ever seen in a grand slam". He said: "It was one of the all-time great efforts by Rublev, who's taken it up to the next level. De Minaur wanted it so bad - it's a damn shame he lost but, unfortunately, someone has got to."
Alex de Minaur left devastated after Australian Open exit
De Minaur looked inconsolable after the match, with girlfriend Katie Boulter spotted embracing him in the locker room afterwards. The World No.10 has never made it past the fourth round of his home grand slam, but came into the tournament dreaming big after wins over Djokovic, Carlos Alcaraz and Alexander Zverev in the lead-up.
"Maybe a couple years ago or even last year, I would be sitting here, maybe even happy with the result, saying, I probably shouldn't have won, he's higher ranked than I am, I took him to five sets, pretty decent effort," de Minaur said in his press conference. "But it's completely changed because now I'm sitting here and I'm absolutely devastated because I saw it as a great opportunity and a match I strongly believed I could have won. But it just slipped away.
"It's not a match that I thought I lost physically. It was just that the racquet was taken out of my hand. He was just standing and hitting from every single part of the court at just mach 10. That's probably the most disappointing part of the whole match.
"I do think I've made a lot of steps in the right direction. I think my level is quite there. Against top-10 opponents this year, I'm 3-1. It's not the worst of things. I was very close today. I'm doing the right things."
with AAP
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