The Mercury News Weekend

Medvedev finishes off match in Australian Open at 3:39 a.m.

- By John Pye

MELBOURNE, AUSTRALIA >> If he wasn't on the court competing, Daniil Medvedev doubted anything would have kept him at Rod Laver Arena until almost 4 in the morning.

The third-seeded Medvedev lost the first two sets of his second-round Australian Open match against No. 53-ranked Emil Ruusuvuori before coming back to win 3-6, 6-7 (1), 6-4, 7-6 (1), 6-0 in 4 hours, 23 minutes in the latest finish of the week.

They'd walked onto Rod Laver Arena to start hitting at 11:07 p.m. Thursday after women's No. 3 Elena Rybakina lost the longest tiebreaker ever in a women's Grand Slam event, 22-20 to Anna Blinkova.

The match ended at 3:39 a.m. Friday, and Medvedev was still there signing autographs as the clock ticked closer to 4.

The long tiebreaker and the uncertaint­y over the starting time, he said, meant his eating and warming up routines were thrown out of kilter.

“When I went on court I was a little exhausted already,” Medvedev, a two-time Australian Open finalist, explained to the scattering of fans still in the arena well after the last trams had finished running for Day 5.

It won't go down as a classic, but still had plenty of drama.

Medvedev needed a medical timeout for blisters on his right foot after the second set, and he spiked his racket into the court after missing a chance to break Ruusuvuori's serve late in the fourth.

Then he had trouble tying the laces of his right shoe right before the deciding fifth set.

Looking at the clock, he was frank with the people who'd stayed there until a couple of hours before the sun was due to rise.

“Honestly guys, I would not be here,” Medvedev said in an on-court interview. “Thanks for staying. If I would be a tennis fan and I would come, at 1 a.m. I would be like `OK, let's go home. We're going to catch the end of the match on the TV.'”

It was the latest finish so far this year, but not close to the tournament record. Andy Murray finished off Thanasi Kokkinakis just after 4 a.m. last year in a second-round

match that lasted 5 hours, 45 minutes.

And that was only good enough for second place on the all-time list. The latest-finishing match in Grand Slam history ended with Lleyton Hewitt beating Marcos Baghdatis at 4:34 a.m. in 2008.

After player complaints last year, Australian Open organizers decided to extend the tournament by adding a 15th day and starting on a Sunday for the first time.

The first round was split over three days, and no matches went past 2 a.m.

But the first day of the second round was entirely different story, with two early men's matches going to a decisive tiebreaker after five sets and top-ranked Iga Swiatek's opener against Danielle Collins going for almost 3 1/4 hours.

And so Day 5 of the Australian Open finished on a Friday, anyway.

Medvedev said he'd have to warm down, get some physiother­apy and try to get to sleep by 6:30 a.m. and wake up some time after midday to start preparing for his thirdround match against Felix Auger-Aliassime.

The 30-minute deciding set was only prolonged by Ruusuvuori, a 24-year-old from Finland who was aiming to reach the third round for the first time at a major, taking a medical timeout for treatment on his sore right shoulder.

“This one,” Medvedev said, “is going to for sure stay in my memory.”

 ?? ANDY WONG — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Daniil Medvedev rallied from two sets down to beat Emil Ruusuvuori.
ANDY WONG — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Daniil Medvedev rallied from two sets down to beat Emil Ruusuvuori.

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