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Novak Djokovic’s father did not attend his son’s semi-final

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Novak Djokovic’s father did not attend his son’s semi-final

PHOTO DAVID GRAY, AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE

Serbian Novak Djokovic’s parents Srdjan Djokovic and Dijana Djokovic at the Australian Open in Melbourne on Wednesday

(Sydney) Srdjan Djokovic, at the center of a controversy at the Australian Open linked to pro-Russian supporters, did not attend his son Novak’s semi-final on Friday in Melbourne, so as not to stir up tensions.

“I am here only to support my son,” he wrote in a press release, a copy of which was obtained by AFP, in reaction to the controversy of the last 24 hours.

“I had no intention of making headlines or causing any disruption […]. So that there is no disruption during the semi-final for my son or for his opponent, I chose to watch the match from home, ”finally decided the father of the Serbian superstar.

Earlier, Ukrainian Ambassador to Australia Vasyl Myroshnychenko called on Novak Djokovic, who beat American Tommy Paul in the semi-finals of the tournament on Friday, to personally apologize and clarify his stance on Russia’s invasion of Australia. ‘Ukraine.

“It is important that Novak addresses this situation,” he stressed. “He should apologize for what happened and condemn the Russian invasion of Ukraine.”

A video posted on a pro-Russian Australian YouTube account on Thursday showed Srdjan Djokovic posing outside the stadium with a man holding a Russian flag with President Vladimir Putin’s face on it.

The video was captioned: “Novak Djokovic’s father makes bold political statement.”

“Z” symbol

Serbian sports journalists have confirmed that it was indeed Djokovic father.

Another man was photographed by AFP inside the stadium during a game with Djokovic wearing a T-shirt bearing the Russian pro-war symbol “Z”.

According to the Ukrainian ambassador, this new non-sporting controversy is likely to overshadow Djokovic’s performance at the Australian Open, a year after he was expelled from the country for entering the country without being vaccinated against COVID-19.

“At the last tournament, we only talked about Djokovic,” said the Ukrainian diplomat. “Now we only talk about Russian flags and Djokovic too”.

Former Ukrainian player Alex Dolgopolov, who is currently fighting with his country’s army, called Djokovic father’s behavior on Twitter “absolutely disgusting”.

Ukrainian Marta Kostyuk, beaten in the Australian Open semi-finals, called Srdjan Djokovic’s behavior “very shocking”. “I don’t know, I don’t understand, it really hurts and I don’t understand how it can be possible.”

Banned Russian flags

Last week, Ambassador Myroshnychenko helped persuade Australian Open organizers to ban Russian and Belarusian flags from the stands in Melbourne.

The Russian Embassy in Australia called the ban “a new example of unacceptable politicization of sport”.

Simeon Boïkov, an Australian pro-Putin activist behind the YouTube video, had urged Russian fans to descend on Melbourne Park, near the stadium where the tournament is taking place, ahead of Djokovic’s quarter-final against Andrey Rublev Wednesday.

“It is an attack on honor and dignity. It has nothing to do with the war,” he said in a video message, apparently in reference to the ban on Russian flags.

Australia’s opposition leader Peter Dutton called Djokovic’s father’s behavior “bizarre”.

“The Russian onslaught continues and, frankly, anyone of good will should try to deter, not encourage, President Putin,” he told Australia’s Nine Network.

Australian Open organizer Tennis Australia said on Thursday it would continue to work with security services to enforce the rules, without directly mentioning the incident with Srdjan Djokovic.

“Players and their teams have been briefed and reminded of the event’s policy regarding flags and symbols and that they should avoid any situation that could disrupt the tournament,” he said.

Since the invasion of Ukraine by Russia on February 24, 2022, Russian and Belarusian players usually participate in competitions as independents and under neutral white flags. This is the case at the Australian Open.

Last year, however, they were excluded from Wimbledon by the organizers. Novak Djokovic, who has never spoken publicly about the Russian invasion of Ukraine, deplored a “crazy” decision.

“Athletes are there to play sports, if they are taken away from sports just because they come from a given country, it’s a bad decision,” he said.

Source: lapresse

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Tennis

All four Ukrainian teenagers successfully start Aus Open 2026

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All four Ukrainian teenagers successfully start Aus Open 2026

January 25, Australian Open 2026 Ukrainian youth started.

In the main draws of the competition, Ukraine is represented by one tennis player and three tennis players: Nikita Belozertsev, Antonina Sushkova, Sofia Belinskaya and Polina Sklyar.

All four Ukrainian teenagers won their starting matches and advanced to the 1/16 final.

Australian Open 2026. Youth

R1: Nikita Belozertsev [6] – Aaro Gabet [Q] – 6:4, 6:1
R2: Nikita Belozertsev [6] – Vihaan Reddy

R1: Antonina Sushkova Zhang Qian Wei – 7:6 (7:1), 6:4
R2: Antonina Sushkova – Ellen Hirschi

R1: Polina Sklyar [Q] – Teresa Germanova – 6:4, 6:2
R2: Polina Sklyar [Q] – Ksenia Efremova [3]

R1: Sofia Belinskaya Emily Chen [WC] – 6:3, 6:4
R2: Sofia Belinskaya – Maia Ilinka Burcescu

Nikita Belozertsev and Polina Sklyar performed in the doubles tournament on Sunday. Unfortunately, no one made it to the second round.

Antonina Sushkova and Sofia Belinskaya will also compete in the girls’ doubles category; They will face each other in the first round.

Australian Open 2026. Couples. Youth

Nikita Belozertsev / Jamie Mackenzie- Ymerali İbrahimi / Cooper Pouch [WC] – 6:7 (6:8), 6:4, [5:10]

Polina Sklyar / Aishi Das- Mariella Tamm / Zhang Rui’en [6] – 5:7, 7:6 (7:2), [6:10]

Source: Sport UA

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Australian Open Alcaraz and Zverev advance to quarterfinals

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Australian Open Alcaraz and Zverev advance to quarterfinals

(Melbourne) World No.1 Carlos Alcaraz qualified for the quarter-finals of the Australian Open on Sunday by beating American Tommy Paul (20e) 7-6 (8/6), 6-4, 7-5 and has still not lost a single set in the tournament.

“The level was very high on both sides so I am very happy to have won in three sets,” began the Spaniard.

In particular, he was able to count on his formidable service and was pleased with it.

“I impressed myself,” he underlined, saying that at the end of each set he looked at his first ball statistics displayed on the court screens.

“I’ve been working on it for a long time so I’m happy that my first serve percentage is good,” he added.

He will face the Australian Alex De Minaur (6e) for a place in the last four which he has never reached before in Melbourne.

Alcaraz is looking at 22 for a first title in Melbourne, his seventh in Majors. Winner at Roland Garros, Wimbledon and the United States Open, Alcaraz has never made it past the quarter-finals in Australia reached in 2024 and 2025.

Easy for Zverev

PHOTO TINGSHU WANG, REUTERS

Alexander Zverev

World No.3 Alexander Zverev won 6-2, 6-4, 6-4 on Sunday against Argentinian Francisco Cerundolo (21e) to advance to the quarter-finals.

After dropping a set in each of his first three matches in Melbourne, the finalist of the last edition this time left little room for doubt against a player who was playing his first round of 16 at the Australian Open at the age of 27.

By beating Cerundolo, Zverev secured a third victory in six duels against the Argentine. The 28-year-old German lost all three matches played on clay and won all three played on hard court.

After a first set pocketed 6-2 in thirty minutes, Zverev encountered more resistance in the second set. Trailing 5-2, Cerundolo managed his first break of the game and then came back to 5-4.

The world No.3, however, gave him no chance in the following game, won without conceding a single point and concluded with an ace.

Initially balanced, the third set turned upside down when Zverev chained a break and a shutout on his serve to break away at 5-3, then 6-4 after 2 hours 12 of play.

A three-time Grand Slam finalist, Zverev will face the young American Learner Tien in the next round.

Tien eliminates Medvedev


PHOTO DAVID GRAY, AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE

Learner Tien

The American Learner Tien, 29e world, did not leave the slightest chance to the Russian Daniil Mededev (12e) to take his revenge on last year and beat him 6-4, 6-0, 6-4, Sunday in the round of 16 where he will play his first Grand Slam quarter-final.

“It’s crazy… I’m so happy,” Tien said before leaving the court, a huge smile lighting up his face, eyes darting around the stands as if he couldn’t believe what he was seeing.

Last year in the second round, Tien, who came from qualifying, eliminated the Russian in five sets. The rest of the season was dark for Medvedev, in Majors in particular where he was beaten in the first round at Roland Garros, Wimbledon and the United States Open.

Medvedev held his own in the first set, but was then completely overwhelmed by an opponent who had everything successful.

After losing 11 games in a row between 5-4 in the first set and 4-0 in the third, Medvedev won his service game to stop the bleeding. Better, he came back to 3-4. But the comeback stopped there, the American winning the next two games and the match, concluded with an exceptional final shot: a long backhand line passing on a smash from Medvedev.

Tien is the youngest player to reach the quarter-finals in Melbourne since Nick Kyrgios in 2015.

De Minaur versus Alcaraz


PHOTO AARON FAVILA, ASSOCIATED PRESS

Alex De Minaur

Australian Alex De Minaur (6e world) swept away Kazakhstan’s Alexander Bublik (10th) on Sundaye) to enjoy a prestigious duel against circuit boss Carlos Alcaraz in the quarter-finals.

The last local player competing in Melbourne, the 26-year-old right-hander won 6-4, 6-1, 6-1 and reached his second quarter-final in a row at the Australian Open.

The Sydney native had been beaten by Bublik in their last two duels, notably suffering a defeat in five sets at Roland Garros after leading two sets to nothing.

De Minaur had never before eliminated a member of the top 10 at the Australian Open.

Djokovic takes advantage of Mensik’s package


PHOTO IZHAR KHAN, AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE

Jakub Mensik

The Czech Jakub Mensik withdrew due to injury on Sunday on the eve of his round of 16 against Novak Djokovic, who thus finds himself qualified without playing for the quarter-finals, the organizers announced.

“It’s an unfortunate decision to make. After the last two matches, I had more and more pain and the problem comes from the left side of my abdominal muscles,” explains the 17e world player in statements sent by the tournament organization.

“Enter the court tomorrow [lundi] would be taking too big a risk for the following weeks, for my next tournaments and simply for my health,” he adds.

Djokovic (4e) will therefore face on Wednesday the winner of the quarter-final which will oppose the Italian Lorenzo Musetti (5e) to the American Taylor Fritz (9e).

Source: lapresse

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Svitolina is on fire. Half of the Australian Open women’s 1/4 final pairs have been announced

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Svitolina is on fire. Half of the Australian Open women’s 1/4 final pairs have been announced

January 25, Australian Open 2026 The 1/8 final matches took place at the top of the women’s singles tournament.

Ukrainian tennis player Elina Svitolina She defeated Mirra Andreeva in two sets. Her next opponent will be world number three Coco Gauff, who knocked out Carolina Muchova in their fourth round match.

The best moments of tennis matches LIVE on Telegram channel Tennis on Sport.ua

World number one Aryna Sabalenka defeated Victoria Mboko. From now on, Sabalenka will support young Iva Jovic, who defeated Yulia Putintseva.

The fourth round matches will be played in the women’s singles subgroup of the Australian Open on the 26th.

Australian Open 2026. 1/8 final

topnet

Arina Sabalenko [1] – Victoria Mboko [17] – 6:1, 7:6 (7:1)
Yulia Putintseva – Iva Jovic [29] – 0:6, 1:6

Coco Gauff [3] – Carolina Muchova [19] – 6:1, 3:6, 6:3
Elina Svitolina [12] – Mirra Andreeva [8] – 6:2, 6:4

Australian Open 2026. Quarter final matches

topnet

Arina Sabalenko [1] – Iva Jovic [29]
Coco Gauff [3] – Elina Svitolina [12]

Source: Sport UA

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