Russia’s Daniil Medvedev lived up to Novak Djokovic’s praise as the “man to beat” at the Australian Open as he charged into his first Melbourne Park final with an impressive 6-4, 6-2, 7-5 win over Stefanos Tsitsipas on Friday.
The rangy Medvedev wrapped the Greek fifth seed in a blanket of pressure under the lights of Rod Laver Arena, capturing his 20th successive victory to have a shot at ending Djokovic’s dynasty in Sunday’s decider.
Fourth seed Medvedev served like a machine until broken in the third set, which revived the Greek fans in the terraces as Tsitsipas roared to a 5-4 lead. But the Russian silenced the crowd with the decisive break in the 11th game, then sealed a dominant win when he rushed forward on match point to whack a booming forehand into the corner.
“I’m happy to manage to keep my nerves because still I didn’t make so many bad shots,” Medvedev said on court of his anxious third set.
“So happy that I managed to keep my calmness. ”
World No. 1 Djokovic will be a formidable opponent for Medvedev in his second Grand Slam final.
Stefanos Tsitsipas on Friday.
Tsitsipas paid the price for another slow start, with Medvedev doing what World No.2 Rafael Nadal could not in his five-set quarter-final loss to Tsitsipas this week — slamming the door on the Greek’s revival.
“I think for sure he was tired after the match with Rafa,” said Medvedev.
After a cagey start on a muggy evening, Medvedev barged through Tsitsipas’s defences to break in the fifth game.
Tsitsipas battled to stay in touch and saved three set points before the Russian thumped an ace down the ‘T’ to seal it.
In the second, Medvedev marched on, raising three break points at 4-2, and with a touch of arrogance rocketed a return down the line to break.
The Russian was soon strolling back to his chair two sets up after bashing an ace on the first of three set points.
Tsitsipas’s struggles became uncomfortable viewing for some people in the crowd and a few jeers rang out when he was broken in the opening game of the third.
Medvedev double-faulted to gift break points and dropped serve with a wild forehand, jolting the crowd into life.
A rejuvenated Tsitsipas surged back as Medvedev’s baseline rockets misfired.
While the Russian’s serve had kept Tsitsipas at bay, it was his returning that proved decisive when he broke the Greek at 5-5.
He closed out the match with a 208 km/hr second serve that Tsitsipas could only chop short, allowing Medvedev to jog forward and fire the winning forehand.
Djokovic, the real “man to beat” at Melbourne Park, awaits.