Alex de Minaur finished 2018 in a very different position than he started it in. The teenage Australian arrived in Brisbane this year at No. 208 in the ATP Rankings, needing a wild card to get into the main draw of the ATP Tour 250 event.
But that is where De Minaur’s dream season began, reaching the semi-finals. Then it was his first tour-level championship-match appearance in Sydney. The #NextGenATP star had won just two tour-level matches before the year, but he’d earn 28 victories in 2018. And now, after qualifying for the Next Gen ATP Finals in Milan, where he advanced to the final, the World No. 31 is hungry for more.
De Minaur spent a week in early December training under the tutelage of former World No. 1 Lleyton Hewitt and legendary coach Tony Roche — who has worked with Ivan Lendl, Patrick Rafter, Roger Federer and Hewitt — with other Australian players, including John Millman, Marc Polmans and Alex Bolt.
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“There are a couple areas in his game he’s got to keep working on and obviously fitness-wise this has been a good year because the past two years he’s had to sort of set himself up for the Australian Open Wild Card Play-off [in early December],” Hewitt said. “You don’t have that many opportunities throughout a year to come together and do a training block and we see this as a massive opportunity to set the tone for the following year, for 2019, and hopefully the guys can see the intensity and the effort.”
De Minaur is known for his speed on the court. And while some players take time to build up their conditioning as they get used to the rigours of the ATP Tour, the Aussie has proven he is fit to compete with some of the best players in the world.
But that hasn’t stopped him from pushing to improve. More than 160,000 people have watched an Instagram video of De Minaur diving to the bottom of a pool, picking up a weight and swimming along the bottom of the pool with it all the way to the other side without taking a breath. It’s safe to say the 19-year-old has an impressive lung capacity.
And while it’s clear De Minaur is working hard, his brother, Dominic de Minaur, says that his sibling’s toughness on court is just part of who he is as a person.
“What you see is what you get with Alex. He’s an incredible young man, he tries his heart out and every time he goes out on the court I know that he’s going to leave it all out there,” De Minaur said. “The way he holds himself and the way he tries on the court, it’s just amazing to watch.”
De Minaur still has two more years as a #NextGenATP player. But he has already earned the respect of his fellow players. Twenty-nine-year-old compatriot Millman, who himself had a breakthrough year in 2018 — reaching a career-high World No. 33 in June — first met De Minaur two years ago during a Davis Cup tie, and he immediately took notice.
“He really impressed me back then. He was a little bit younger then, a little bit more raw. But the way he comes out on court, the enthusiasm he shows, the energy he brings, I think it’s really special. And what he did this year, I thought was incredible,” Millman said. “To come from in the 200s to sit at around 30 at his age, the sky’s the limit for him.”
Watch A Day In De Minaur’s Life:
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Now, as the off-season winds down, De Minaur will return to where his breakthrough started, in Brisbane and then Sydney. But this time, all eyes will be on him.
“There’s a lot of media attention around him and playing in those Brisbane and Sydney events leading into the Australia Open, the biggest thing as it gets closer is he needs to embrace it,” Hewitt said. “He’s 19 years old. This is what you want to do. This is a great opportunity to play in some of the biggest events in your home country. He can be playing a lot of those matches on Centre Court with a full crowd behind him, and it’s about embracing it.”
De Minaur is not worried about the hype, and the pressure that comes with his 2018 breakthrough. The 19-year-old is simply focused on taking what he learned and applying it as best he can to continue his climb.
“I have a great team of guys around me that help keep me grounded and focused on the important things in life,” De Minaur said. “I’ve just got to keep doing what I’m doing.”
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