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Van de Zandschulp, proven giant-slayer, eyes Djokovic shock at Australian Open

  • Posted: Jan 23, 2026

Ousting the sport’s elite is never meant to be easy, but Botic van de Zandschulp has repeatedly shown he possesses the belief, and the game, to trouble the very best on the biggest stages.

The 30-year-old Dutchman will look to tap into that giant-slaying pedigree again on Saturday, when he faces record 10-time Australian Open champion Novak Djokovic in the third round at Melbourne Park. It is a daunting assignment, but not an unfamiliar one for Van de Zandschulp, who has beaten ATP No. 1 Club members Carlos Alcaraz and Rafael Nadal within the past two years — and holds a recent victory over Djokovic himself.

“It’s always nice to play one of the best of the game. It’s a nice matchup as well, I know I can play well during them and I’ve proved it in the past,” Van de Zandschulp told ATPTour.com in Melbourne. “I know what I’m capable of… It gives you a confidence boost when you see those names in the draw. Of course you are scared, but further into the tournament when I have some matches in, I feel I can beat a lot of players.

“Matches like these against Novak, if you can enjoy it during it, it’s a really nice occasion.”

Van de Zandschulp prevailed in his most recent Lexus ATP Head2Head meeting with Djokovic last year at Indian Wells, a match he remembers vividly. Entering the main draw as a lucky loser, the Dutchman produced a clinical deciding-set performance to spring the upset.

“I didn’t feel great at that time, but now I am feeling a little bit better tennis-wise,” Van de Zandschulp said, reflecting on their Indian Wells clash. “Hopefully that helps me… Here in Australia, it’s one of his favourite tournaments, one of his favourite courts, so it will be a different test. He was struggling there [in Indian Wells]. The conditions were tough: pretty hot, pretty bouncy.”

Djokovic is far from the only superstar Van de Zandschulp has tested — and toppled — in recent seasons. He stunned Alcaraz in the second round of the 2024 US Open and, two months later, famously brought Nadal’s storied career to a close at the Davis Cup Finals.

Each victory offered a different form of validation, reinforcing his ability not only to match the sport’s elite shot for shot, but also to manage the moment and the magnitude of the occasion.

“Beating Alcaraz over five sets is not an easy task, but beating him 3-0 was something I couldn’t imagine before stepping on court,” Van de Zandschulp said. “[Beating] Rafa was also pretty special because it’s not often in tennis you know who you are going to play a month in advance.

“I found out that it was going to be his last tournament and that we were going to play Spain in the quarters. If he was going to play, I would be the one to play him, so I thought a lot about the match when usually you don’t have time to. That was, mentally, the toughest match for me.”

<img alt=”Rafael Nadal, Botic van de Zandschulp” style=”width:100%;” src=”/-/media/images/news/2026/01/22/15/18/nadal-botic-davis-cup-2024-1.jpg” />

When Van de Zandschulp walks onto Rod Laver Arena this weekend, it will mark his third consecutive year competing on the iconic stage. He fell to Jannik Sinner and Alex de Minaur in first-round encounters in the past two editions of the hard-court major. Those were experiences that, while bruising, have helped remove the novelty of the occasion.

Now, the Dutchman is back in the Australian Open third round for the first time since 2022, having dropped just one set en route after victories over 27th seed Brandon Nakashima and Shang Juncheng.

“I’m really happy about it. It’s been a while since I won a match here,” said Van de Zandschulp. “The last two years, I had some tough draws with Sinner and De Minaur in the first round. But I’m playing some good tennis again – I started the season pretty well.

“It’s good I already played there [Rod Laver Arena] as it’s nothing new, but it’s still going to be a huge challenge.”

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Part of that renewed confidence can be traced back to a more settled offseason — a rarity in recent years. With Davis Cup commitments stretching deep into November, Van de Zandschulp has often had limited time to reset physically and mentally.

“The last couple of years, we have played Davis Cup in November, so the offseason has been pretty tough, pretty busy,” he added. “Now I already had three weeks off, five weeks practice, so I think that did me pretty well, especially for the mind, being at home a little bit longer. I really enjoyed my offseason and have started fresh.”

Against Djokovic on his most decorated stage, Van de Zandschulp will once again arrive as the underdog. Yet history suggests that is a role he knows how to embrace.

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How De Minaur's 43 hard-court wins all added up to be a chart-topper

  • Posted: Jan 22, 2026

During the Australian Open, ATPTour.com will bring fans insight into the leaders of key statistical categories, showing how performances throughout 2025 all added up to successful seasons and the promise of more good times ahead in 2026.

Australian Alex de Minaur was a force on hard courts in 2025, tallying a tour-leading 43 wins and smashing his previous benchmarks on the surface.

One of the fastest players on Tour, De Minaur suffocates his opponents from the baseline with his blistering court coverage, squeaky-clean ballstriking and his relentless tenacity. His grit was on full display at the ATP 500 in Washington, D.C., where he dramatically saved three championship points to edge Alejandro Davidovich Fokina.

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Speaking after his first-round win at the Australian Open, De Minaur said that two tactics to take time away from opponents have underpinned his success on hard courts: flat groundstrokes and playing close to the baseline.

“My shots on both sides are on the flatter side, which means that the ball kind of skids through when it hits the court… if the ball is coming back to your opponent quicker and quicker, it’s not really allowing him to think most of the time,” De Minaur said.

“I have always felt that I have been able to use my speed to retrieve and play defensive, but one of the biggest things that has helped me take that next step is use my speed to take time away from my opponents and that’s where court positioning is super important.

“It’s much harder than if I’m a couple meters behind the baseline, and then my ball is slow and loopy and my opponent has all the time in the world to generate and hit winners past me, especially with the way the guys are hitting the ball nowadays. When they’ve got time, they are crunching the ball. So I’m doing my best not to give my opponents time.”

De Minaur’s Hard-Court Record, Past Three Seasons

2025 43-17
2024 30-15
2023 36-18

 

De Minaur’s triumph in Washington, D.C. marked his 10th tour-level title, eight of which have come on hard courts. Among his other standout hard-court results in 2025, the 26-year-old reached the quarter-finals at both the Australian Open and US Open. He was a finalist in Rotterdam and a semi-finalist in Beijing and Vienna.

While De Minaur recorded the most hard-court match wins last season, Jannik Sinner boasted the highest winning percentage on the surface (92.9 per cent, 39-3 match record). Sinner won five of his six titles in 2025 on hard courts, including the Australian Open and the Nitto ATP Finals in his home country Italy. De Minaur was fifth in hard-court winning percentage last season behind Sinner, Carlos Alcaraz, Novak Djokovic and Felix Auger-Aliassime.

2025 Hard-Court Winning Percentage

Player Win % Record
Jannik Sinner 92.9 39-3
Carlos Alcaraz 84.4 38-7
Novak Djokovic 78.1 25-7
Felix Auger-Aliassime 73.2 41-15
Alex de Minaur 71.7 43-17

See all stories in this series

Visit our Infosys ATP Stats section for more insights.

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Sinner cruises on at Australian Open, tips his cap to Alcaraz's magic touch

  • Posted: Jan 22, 2026

Jannik Sinner continued his smooth march toward a potential third straight Australian Open crown on Thursday night, dispatching home favourite James Duckworth 6-1, 6-4, 6-2 with clinical efficiency.

The second seed was relentless throughout, extending his flawless 9-0 record against Australian opponents at Grand Slam events. Sinner faced little trouble on serve, erasing all three break points he encountered, according to Infosys Stats.

“Every match is very difficult, so I’m very happy to be in the next round,” Sinner said in his on-court interview. “I was returning very well today, and my serve was also good, so I’m very happy about my performance. I want to thank you guys [the crowd]. I know I’m not Australian, but you have been very fair to me, so thank you for the support.”

Sinner booked a third-round clash with American Eliot Spizzirri, and while a showdown with rival and World No. 1 Carlos Alcaraz could only come in the final, the Italian couldn’t resist a light-hearted nod to the Spaniard when the topic of drop shots arose.

“I think we all know who has the best drop shots… Carlos, of course,” Sinner said of Alcaraz, with whom he has split the past eight major titles.

The No. 2 in the PIF ATP Rankings, Sinner is aiming to become just the second man in the Open Era — alongside Novak Djokovic — to lift three consecutive Australian Open trophies.

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Wawrinka wins 5-set thriller to roll back years, reach Australian Open R3

  • Posted: Jan 22, 2026

Stan Wawrinka added another memorable moment to his farewell season on Thursday afternoon at the Australian Open, carving his name into the record books once more.

The 40-year-old Swiss battled past determined French qualifier Arthur Gea 4-6, 6-3, 3-6, 7-5, 7-6(3) in a gripping four-hour, 33-minute encounter to become the oldest man to reach the third round at Melbourne Park since Ken Rosewall achieved the feat at age 44 in 1978. The former World No. 3, who lifted his first of three Grand Slam trophies at the Australian Open in 2014, is set to retire at the end of the season.

“Exhausted… As I told you, it’s my last Australian Open, so I’m trying to last as long as possible,” Wawrinka said in his on-court interview. “I’m not young anymore, so I need your [crowd] energy. It’s an amazing feeling to be on this court and have so much amazing support.”

The marathon win marked Wawrinka’s 58th five-set match (31–27), the most of any player in the Open Era, according to the Infosys ATP Win/Loss Index. Drawing on his vast experience, he edged past the 21-year-old Gea, who was contesting his first five-set match at tour level.

Advancing to the third round in Melbourne for the 12th time in his career, Wawrinka will next take on ninth seed Taylor Fritz or Vit Kopriva.

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Cilic ties Ivansevic for most wins by Croatian man in Open Era

  • Posted: Jan 22, 2026

Marin Cilic reached parity with one of his iconic countrymen after a commanding second-round performance on Thursday at the Australian Open.

With his 6-4, 6-3, 6-2 triumph against Denis Shapovalov at Melbourne Park, the 37-year-old Cilic earned his 599th tour-level victory, drawing him level with former World No. 2 and 2001 Wimbledon champion Goran Ivanisevic for the most wins by a Croatian man in the Open Era.

“I think it is an incredible achievement for any Croatian,” Cilic told ATPTour.com in Melbourne. “I know Goran. When I was working with him he said, ‘Nobody told me I had 599. I would have played another one!’. We were laughing.

“Just fantastic to be in this position. Obviously different careers, different times. We are both different kind of players. But also in order to achieve this number of victories you have to be so consistent for so many years. So it’s a great achievement for a Croatian.”

Cilic, himself a former No. 3 in the PIF ATP Rankings and a Grand Slam titlist at the 2014 US Open, can hit another milestone on Saturday in Melbourne. He will bid to surpass Ivanisevic and notch his 600th tour-level win when he faces 12th seed Casper Ruud or Jaume Munar. The Croatian would become just the second active player to hit 600 wins after Novak Djokovic.

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