Baes - Tsitsipas 1-2: Stefanos Sifounas qualified for the fourth round of the Madrid Open - Sportish
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Baes – Tsitsipas 1-2: Stefanos Sifounas qualified for the fourth round of the Madrid Open

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Baes – Tsitsipas 1-2: Stefanos Sifounas qualified for the fourth round of the Madrid Open

Tsitsipas needed more than two hours, but finally managed to defeat Sebastian Baez and prevail with 2: 1 sets (7: 5, 3: 6, 6: 3). Bernade Zapate Mirales is his opponent in the fourth round of the Madrid Open.

Stefanos Tsitsipas defeated Sebastian Baez after two hours and 14 minutes with a 2-1 set win (7: 5, 3: 6, 6: 3) and thus reached the fourth round of the Madrid Open.


The Greek champions will meet Spain’s Bernade Zapata Mirales (No. 42 in the world), who earlier defeated Russia’s Roman Shafiulin 2-1.

The match

The two tennis players easily held their serves in the first seven games without the threat of a break. However, in the eighth game, Baez dropped out and temporarily took the lead for the set. Stefanos reacted immediately. He initially won the ninth game, which was a thrill in which Baez cleared three break points.

He then won all three remaining sets by getting another break on the Argentine’s serve and won the set 7-5, playing beautiful tennis in the latter part of the set.


Sebastian Baez went into the second set angry. First, Tsitsipas had two break points in the first game, which he erased and then made it 1-0 while also breaking Stefanos’ first serve. In the third set, Baez held his serve to make it 3-0.

Stefanos, who didn’t start well in the first set, responded to 3-1 in the fourth game, which he won comfortably. From there he tried to grab the break to level the set and despite having chances, Baez held on and won the second set 6-3.

The third set was more even than the previous two as the two tennis players served lightly without the threat of a break. In the eighth game, Tsitsipas broke Baes’ serve and used the advantage for the third set. In the last game, the two fought a nice duel, but Tsitsipas was able to win in the end.

Source: sport 24

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Tennis

Elena-Gabriela Ruse – Mirra Andreeva. Watch online. Live broadcast

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Elena-Gabriela Ruse – Mirra Andreeva. Watch online. Live broadcast

January 23 Romanian tennis player Elena-Gabriela Ruse (WTA 79) and “neutral” Mirra Andreeva (WTA 7) will determine Elina Svitolina’s (WTA 12) opponent in the Australian Open 1/8 final.

Ruse and Andreeva will start the meeting at around 12:40 Kiev time (after the Tiafoe – de Minaur match) at the Rod Laver Arena, the central stadium of the Australian Open.

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

Ruse has never played against Andreeva before; This will be the first head-to-head meeting between the rivals.

Svitolina knocked out Russian Diana Schneider in the third round of the major in Melbourne.

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Source: Sport UA

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Rublev failed to reach the fourth round of the Australian Open

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Rublev failed to reach the fourth round of the Australian Open

Russian tennis player Andrei Rublev failed to reach the fourth round of the Australian Open in Melbourne.

In the third round match, Rublev, who received the 13th seed, lost to Argentinean Francisco Serundolo with a score of 3:6, 6:7 (4:7), 3:6. The match lasted 2 hours 8 minutes.

Serundolo’s next opponent will be the winner of the match Alexander Zverev (Germany, 3) – Cameron Norrie (Great Britain, 26).

Grand Slam Tournament. Australian Open. Melbourne (Australia). Hard. Total prize fund: about $75 million

Men. Third circle

Francisco Serundolo (Argentina, 18) – Andrey Rublev (Russia, 13) – 6:3, 7:6 (7:4), 6:3.

Source: Sportbox

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Tennis

Medvedev’s crazy comeback at the Australian Open! How did he even do it?

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Medvedev’s crazy comeback at the Australian Open! How did he even do it?

The Russian tennis player almost flew out of the tournament, but was able to change everything.

Daniil Medvedev’s path through the Australian Open 2026 grid cannot be called comfortable. In the third round, the Russian had to spend almost four hours on the court, survive two lost sets and go through a protracted psychological crisis right during the match. The opponent was Fabian Marozan, a Hungarian who has proven more than once that he is capable of breaking the rhythm of the favorites and imposing heavy, sticky tennis.

Initially it was clear that it would not be easy. But few people expected such a thriller.

Whom Medvedev has already passed at the Australian Open

Australian Open 2026 for Daniil Medvedev began without extravaganza, but with the necessary result. In the first round, the Russian met with the Dutchman Jesper de Jong. The match turned out to be difficult: almost three hours on the court, a tight fight and a tiebreaker in the third set. Medvedev served seven aces, worked actively on the receiving end and managed to put the pressure on his opponent at key moments – 7:5, 6:2, 7:6 (7:2).

Daniil Medvedev / Photo: © Fred Lee / Contributor / Getty Images Sport / Gettyimages.ru

In the second round, Daniil faced Frenchman Quentin Halis. The scenario turned out to be similar: the starting game remained with the opponent, but then Medvedev gradually took the initiative. He became more accurate in his rallies, reduced the number of mistakes and confidently advanced to the third round, winning three sets in a row – 6:7 (9:11), 6:3, 6:4, 6:2. Even then it was noticeable that the Russian was still far from ideal form, but compensated for this through patience and experience.

Medvedev is on the verge of relegation

The match with Fabian Marozan began for Medvedev with a positive signal – a fast break. However, the Hungarian immediately returned serve and made it clear that he was determined to play on an equal footing. Already in the first set, the Russian was close to a second break several times, but did not capitalize on his chances. Gradually, Marozhan began to feel more confident, began to impose long rallies more often and brought the game to a tiebreaker, where he acted more calmly – 7:6 (7:5).

Daniil Medvedev / Photo: © Lintao Zhang / Staff / Getty Images Sport / Gettyimages.ru

In the second set the picture became even more alarming. Medvedev often lost rallies on his serve, did not find the depth of his shots and looked confused. Marozhan led with a break 3:1, then increased the advantage, and each game won by the Russian was given with great difficulty. Even a reverse break did not help turn the tide of the game – the Hungarian again took Medvedev’s serve and closed the set – 6:4. After two games, the Russian found himself in an extremely difficult position, losing in sets and not controlling the game.

Turning point: patience, a series of games and the “steering wheel”

The third set began with a new blow – Marozhan immediately made a break. At this moment the situation looked almost critical. But this is where Medvedev managed to change the nature of the match. He began to play with more restraint, reduced risks, began to delay rallies more often and wait for his opponent’s mistakes. A reverse break restored equality, and then the game went on without a clear advantage for any of the opponents.

With the score 5:5, Medvedev increased his aggression and won two key games in a row, taking the set. This episode became a turning point. The Russian felt confident, but Marozhan, on the contrary, began to lose freshness and accuracy.

The fourth set was already under the complete control of Medvedev. He won the game to zero in just 19 minutes. The Hungarian was noticeably tired, began to be late to the balls and make more and more mistakes, while the Russian calmly did his job.

Daniil Medvedev / Photo: © Lintao Zhang / Staff / Getty Images Sport / Gettyimages.ru

In the fifth set, Marozhan still tried to cling to the match, even managed to make a reverse break, but physically he could no longer maintain the pace. Medvedev again took the lead with a break, confidently came out to serve for the match and brought the match to victory – 6:3.

In total, the opponents spent 3 hours 46 minutes on the court. This victory was Medvedev’s tenth in five-set matches in his career and the fifth after going 0:2 in sets. It is noteworthy that he made four such comebacks precisely at the Australian Open, a tournament that regularly tests his endurance and character. In the fourth round of the Australian Open, Daniil Medvedev will play with American Lerner Thien, the 29th racket in the world and the 25th seed. He lost to him in Melbourne last year, so it’s time to take revenge.

Source: Sportbox

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