The Herald (South Africa)

Australian Popyrin offers glimpse of potential

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Australian Alexei Popyrin has blossomed quietly in the shadows of compatriot­s Nick Kyrgios and Alex De Minaur in recent years but on Sunday the rangy 21-year-old grabbed the spotlight with his maiden ATP title in Singapore.

Having never before surmounted the quarterfin­als of an ATP event, Popyrin overhauled Kazakh Alexander Bublik 4-6 6-0 6-2 in the Singapore Open decider to continue a dream start to the season.

Popyrin now has an 8-2 winning record in 2021, having upset David Goffin in the Australian Open first round and former US Open champion Marin Cilic in the Singapore semifinals. “To have a start like I’m having this year is definitely showing how much work I put in the preseason,” he said.

“I keep saying it and I’m going to keep saying it throughout the whole year: I think the work I put in during the preseason this year was unbelievab­le.”

In the midst of the Covid-19 pandemic, Australian tennis is in rude health.

Popyrin, whose ranking has now shot to a career-high 82, is one of five Australian­s in the men’s top 100, with De Minaur (23) leading the way.

Ash Barty remains world No 1 in the women’s side, with Ajla Tomljanovi­c (74) second among Australian­s.

Big things have been expected from Popyrin since he won the French Open junior singles title in 2017.

A protégé of the Francebase­d academy run by Serena Williams’s coach Patrick Mouratoglo­u, Popyrin has reached several promising milestones, winning a match at all four Grand Slams and making the third round at the Australian and US Opens.

So far this season, Popyrin has also shown a promising mental resilience and a ruthless streak to convert his chances on court.

In Singapore, he won all five tiebreaks he played on the way to the final.

“I think the level-headedness that I had [was key], I was always trying to stay positive, stay calm as much as I could because I knew that I would have opportunit­ies and to take those opportunit­ies, you have to be calm,” he said.

The win will open doors to tournament­s with better prize money but Popyrin said celebratio­ns would be low-key.

“I’ll celebrate by hopping on a flight in three hours and flying back home to see my family,” he said.

“Maybe I’ll upgrade my ticket to business class, but that’s it.

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