The Press

Tomic misses out on Aust Open

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Bernard Tomic’s Australian Open campaign is over before the tournament proper even begins after a three-set finalround qualifying loss to Italian Lorenzo Sonego.

Tomic looked shattered after the 6-1 6-7 (5-7) 6-4 defeat on Sunday, not moving to return serves in an often-punishing first set.

After a visit from the trainer, he rallied in the second set to force a decider but came up short, snapping his seven-year streak of playing in every major and leaving him at a career crossroads.

Drained after the taxing loss, Tomic sarcastica­lly responded to journalist­s asking him where he’d go from the loss.

‘‘I just count money, that’s all I do. I count my millions,’’ he said.

‘‘You go do what I did (on court). Bye bye.’’

Tomic, the world No.142, will further slump in the ATP rankings as he will lose his points earned from a thirdround appearance at Melbourne Park last year.

He misses his home grand slam for the first time since 2008.

Tomic’s performanc­es earlier in the week gave hope that a comeback could be on the cards for the fallen former Australian No.1.

He routed Vincent Millot in 48 minutes and then steadied against American Tommy Paul in the second round, winning in a third set tiebreak.

But Tomic’s final singles outing at Melbourne Park began as a no-contest. He won just 11 points in the first set, looking nonplussed at the Italian’s procession of winners.

Moving poorly and with no intensity, Tomic simply gave away points on Sonego’s serve deemed out of reach.

It was a sorry sight, exacerbate­d by the scheduling of the 2011 Wimbledon quarter finalist and biggest name in the qualifying tournament, on court eight.

Out of nowhere, he lifted in the second set, maximising his effort in his own service games to push through. At 6-5, the Tomic grunt was back.

The crowd lifted with the Queensland­er and he responded in the second-set tiebreak, fistpumpin­g his way back to the chair as he levelled the match.

At 5-4, Tomic double faulted to give away match points, pulling out a huge winner down the line to continue his resistance.

It couldn’t last, with Sonego closing out the match and richly celebratin­g his first main draw appearance at a grand slam.

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