Geelong Advertiser

YOUNG GUN AIMS LONG-RANGE

- DARREN WALTON

TYPIFYING the new age of tennis, young gun Alex de Minaur hopes to challenge for the sport’s biggest prizes well into his 30s.

De Minaur moved into the second round of the US Open yesterday with victory over Pierre-Hugues Herber before outlining his ambitions for the future. Unlike the old days, when most stars put away their racquets and retired by 30, he wants to follow in the footsteps of modern-day greats Roger Federer, 38, Rafael Nadal, 33, Stan Wawrinka, 34, and 32year-old world No.1 Novak Djokovic and play on and on.

The 20-year-old sits third behind Stefanos Tsitsipas, 21, and teenage whiz Felix Auger-Aliassime in the 2019 Race to Milan, the ATP’s season-ending finals for next-gen challenger­s, and dreams of jousting for majors with the emerging stars for the next decade or more.

“At the moment we’ve got unbelievab­le ambassador­s for our sport, but a new wave is sort of trying to knock on the door and slowly week in, week out we’re putting in some good results,” de Minaur said after defeating Herbert 6-4, 6-2, 6-7 (6-8) 7-5.

“So, look, I’m excited for things to come. As part of a new generation of a lot of very talented and exciting players, that’s going to be fun to watch and fun to compete against for the next 15 years.”

De Minaur was made to sweat for more than three hours against Herbert, the Frenchman who Nick Kyrgios defeated last year after receiving a controvers­ial mid-match pep talk from chair umpire Mohamed Lahyani.

“It’s never an easy matchup against Pierre so very happy with how things went,” he said.

De Minaur’s next match tomorrow morning is against Chilean 31st seed Cristian Garin, who needed five sets to get past American wildcard Chris Eubanks.

“He’s another quality opponent, very tough, very solid,” he said of Garin.

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