By Alix Ramsay
We’re three weeks into a brand new 12 months and 5 days into the primary Grand Slam of the season. There’s a lot to look ahead to, so many storylines that might presumably unfold. Or perhaps not.
Thus far, completely nothing has modified from final 12 months. Jannik Sinner remains to be, seemingly, unstoppable within the Rold Laver Enviornment; Naomi Osaka remains to be quietly bonkers however discovering a approach to win, Stan Wawrinka remains to be going and Novak Djokovic remains to be doing no matter he can to cease the sands of time slipping by means of his racket strings.
Oh, and the Melbourne climate remains to be up and down like a yoyo: raining on Wednesday, chilly on Thursday and predicted to be nicely over 100 levels in a couple of days.
Allow us to start with the mighty Stan. He’ll flip 41 in a few months and after a distinctly abnormal 2025, he determined to make this his final 12 months on tour. Now, to his delight and everybody’s amazement, he’s into the third spherical in Melbourne – he has not executed this nicely at a slam in three years – and is the primary man in his 40s to attain such a feat in Australia since Ken Rosewall in 1978.
It damned close to killed him, thoughts you: he wanted simply over 4 and a half hours to beat Arthur Gea, the 21-year-old qualifier from France, 10-3 within the match tiebreak on the finish of the fifth set. Stan was nonetheless standing; the person virtually half his age was the one stricken with cramp.
Requested how he felt after such an impressive win, our Stan merely laughed and stated: “Exhausted!”. Not fairly the emotional outpouring the interviewer had hoped for however hey ho.
“It’s my final Australian Open so I’m making an attempt to final so long as doable,” he went on. “I’m not younger any extra so I would like [the crowd’s] power. I’m all the time going to struggle; I’m all the time going to push myself. It was an extended match, I don’t know the way I’m going to recuperate however I’m tremendous blissful.”

This was extra prefer it. The person with the microphone thought he is perhaps on to one thing right here. So, actually, how was Stan going to recuperate? Stan surveyed the group supping their beers within the Kia Enviornment. “I do not know,” he stated. “Possibly I’m going to select up a beer. I believe I deserve one.”
That he did and, beer or no beer, he now has Taylor Fritz to arrange for on Saturday. The American took two minutes shy of two hours to brush apart Vit Kopriva 6-1, 6-4, 7-6.
Djokovic, too, was in no temper to hold round as he sped previous Francisco Maestrelli, a qualifier from Italy, 6-3, 6-2, 6-2. Then once more, this bit a grand slam isn’t the issue for the 10-time Australian Open champion; it’s this time subsequent week when he has been by means of 5 rounds and, on the naked minimal, 15 units that the difficulty begins. That’s when his 38-year-old physique begins to complain and he nonetheless has Sinner and Carlos Alcaraz forward of him.
Nonetheless, for the second, all is nicely as he prepares for a gathering with Botic van de Zandschulp, the person who beat him within the second spherical of Indian Wells final March.
Whereas Stan was sweating and grafting and getting his win, over on the RLA, Sinner was sprinting away from James Duckworth 6-1, 6-4, 6-2 in a single hour and 48 minutes. He barely broke a bead of sweat within the chilly, night air whereas poor Duckworth was dripping moist as he tried to chase down any ball that got here inside affordable attain. Sadly for him, few of them did. Or, at the very least, not those that mattered.
It left the group underwhelmed. Sure, they admired Sinner’s talent however as soon as their Aussie hope was proving himself to be no match for the defending champion, their consideration wandered. Why was Jannik carrying that bizarre package? Might anybody look good in khaki and mustard-coloured sneakers? Particularly a pale, redhead just like the defending champ.
To be truthful, it was marginally higher than the outfit he wore on Tuesday (khaki shorts with a mustard-coloured stripe down one leg, mustard sneakers and a mustard prime) however not a lot. And referring to the predominant coloration as khaki was being well mannered; it’s extra baby-diaper-brown. It’s really not a superb look. However Jannik and his terrible package will probably be again to face Eliot Spizzirri, the person from Connecticut, in a few days.
Which brings us neatly to Osaka. Her outfit made extra information than her tennis when she opened her account in Melbourne. Arriving on court docket in flowing robes, a hat with a veil and lengthy practice and an umbrella with a giant butterfly perched on prime of it, she seemed like a beekeeping bride going to her wedding ceremony. Beneath that was a turquoise quantity embellished with yellow, frilly bits (apparently, it was impressed by the image of a jellyfish in her daughter’s coloring guide).
However when she confronted Sorana Cirstea, the hat, veil and umbrella have been gone. She had a livid former world No.21 to take care of and there was no time for trend statements.
Now aged 35, that is Cirstea’s final Australian Open and as she pushed Osaka to a few, fraught units, she grew to become more and more aggravated at her opponent yelling “c’mon!” in between Cirstea’s first and second serves. Osaka received – simply – 6-3, 4-6, 6-2 after which seemed perplexed on the ice-cold handshake on the web. When Osaka requested what that was for, Cirstea instructed her in no unsure phrases.
Pouring gasoline on the fireplace, Osaka made her level within the on-court interview. Requested what had it taken to win that tight match, she shrugged and stated: “Apparently quite a lot of c’mons that she was indignant about. No matter. This was her final Australian Open so I’m sorry she was mad about it.”
The group booed for that and, later, Osaka apologised for making “disrespectful” remarks.
When she comes again to play Maddison Inglis, an Aussie qualifier, she would possibly need to revert to the veil and the massive hat. After Thursday’s match of pique, it will be greatest to go incognito in opposition to an Aussie taking part in in entrance an Aussie crowd.

















