赛派号

500多度的隐形眼镜一般多少钱 Alex de Minaur

Australian tennis player (born 1999) In this Spanish name, the first or paternal surname is De Miñaur and the second or maternal family name is Román.

Alex de MinaurDe Minaur in 2024Full nameÁlex de Miñaur Román[1]Country (sports) AustraliaResidenceSydney, New South Wales, AustraliaAlicante, Valencia, SpainNew Providence, BahamasBorn (1999-02-17) 17 February 1999 (age 26)Sydney, New South Wales, AustraliaHeight6 ft 0 in (183 cm)Turned pro2015PlaysRight-handed (two-handed backhand)[2]CoachAdolfo GutierrezPeter Luczak[3]Prize moneyUS $22,526,270[2] 26th all-time in earnings SinglesCareer record305–179Career titles10Highest rankingNo. 6 (15 July 2024)[4]Current rankingNo. 7 (3 November 2025)Grand Slam singles resultsAustralian OpenQF (2025)French OpenQF (2024)WimbledonQF (2024)US OpenQF (2020, 2024, 2025)Other tournamentsTour FinalsSF (2025)DoublesCareer record37–61Career titles1Highest rankingNo. 58 (12 October 2020)Current rankingNo. 361 (22 December 2025)Grand Slam doubles resultsAustralian Open1R (2017, 2021)French Open2R (2020, 2021)Wimbledon2R (2021)US Open2R (2019)Other doubles tournamentsOlympic Games1R (2024)Grand Slam mixed doubles resultsWimbledon2R (2023)Team competitionsDis CupF (2022, 2023) Record: 15–8Last updated on: 22 December 2025.

Alex de Miñaur Román[a] (born 17 February 1999) is an Australian professional tennis player. He achieved a career-high ATP singles ranking of world No. 6 on 15 July 2024 and a doubles ranking of No. 58 on 12 October 2020. He has won ten ATP Tour singles and one doubles title, and has reached six major quarterfinals.

Early life and junior career[edit]

Alex de Minaur was born in Sydney, Australia.[2] His father, Anibal, is Uruguayan and his mother, Esther, is Spanish.[6][7][8] His father owned an Italian restaurant on George Street in Sydney and met Esther when she began working there as a waitress.[9] De Minaur has two brothers and three sisters — Dominic, Daniel, Natalie, Cristina and Sara.[9][10]

His name—commonly pronounced /diː mɪˈnɔːr/ by Australians and other native English-speakers— inspired his nickname of "The Demon", as well as his use of the demon logo when signing the camera lens after winning matches, his signature celebration.

De Minaur has dual Australian and Spanish citizenship, and is fluent in English and Spanish and also speaks some French.[11][12] He spent the first five years of his life in the south Sydney suburb of Carss Park[13] before relocating to Alicante, Spain.[14] He completed most of his early education in Spain before returning to Australia at age 13 due to the Spanish financial crisis.[15] As of 2015,[update] De Minaur was again living in Spain.[6][9] De Minaur has stated that he has always felt a strong bond with Australia even though he has lived most of his life in Spain. In 2017, he told the Sydney Morning Herald: "I used to represent Spain but I always felt I was Australian. As soon as we moved back here again that was the first thing I wanted to do — play for Australia."[16]

De Minaur began playing tennis at age three at the Sydney Private Tennis Academy at the Parkside Tennis Courts in Kogarah Bay.[17][18] He has been coached by Adolfo Gutierrez since he was nine years old and living in Alicante.[6] De Minaur reached a career-high ranking of 2 on the juniors circuit and won the 2016 Australian Open boys' doubles title alongside Blake Ellis.[19] Although Lleyton Hewitt has never officially been his coach, he continues to be a mentor.[20]

Professional career[edit] 2015–2017: Early career and turning pro[edit]

De Minaur plays tennis under the flag of Australia.[12] He made his professional debut in July 2015 at the Spain F22, reaching the quarterfinals. He was given a wildcard into the qualifying rounds of the 2016 Australian Open, but lost in round one to Kimmer Coppejans. De Minaur then spent the majority of the 2016 season playing on the ITF circuit in Spain, reaching two finals. He made his first ATP Challenger Tour final in Eckental, Germany after qualifying, however lost to Steve Darcis in the final.[21]

De Minaur commenced 2017 at the Brisbane International, where he defeated Mikhail Kukushkin and Frances Tiafoe in qualifying to reach his first ATP Tour main draw. He lost in the first round to Mischa Zverev. The following week, he received a wildcard into the Sydney International where he defeated world No. 46, Benoît Paire to claim his first Tour-level win.[22]

De Minaur made his Grand Slam debut at the 2017 Australian Open after receiving a wildcard. He faced Gerald Melzer in the first round and won in five sets, after sing a match point in the fourth set.[23] He lost to Sam Querrey in round two.[22]

In May, de Minaur made his French Open debut, after being awarded a wildcard. He lost the opening round to Robin Haase, in straight sets.[24] In June, De Minaur lost in the first round of Nottingham and Ilkley Challengers and the second round of Wimbledon qualifying.[citation needed]

De Minaur was awarded a wildcard into the 2017 US Open, losing in round one to Dominic Thiem.[25]

In December, De Minaur won the Australian Open Playoff for a main draw wildcard into the 2018 Australian Open.[26] He finished the year with a singles ranking of No. 208.[22][27]

2018: Two ATP finals, NextGen runner-up[edit]

De Minaur commenced the year at the Brisbane International after receiving a wildcard into the main draw.[28] He defeated American Steve Johnson in straight sets, before scoring a career high win against world No. 24, Milos Raonic, in straight sets.[29] He then defeated qualifier Michael Mmoh in the quarterfinals, before losing to Ryan Harrison in the semifinals.[30] De Minaur is the lowest ranked player and the youngest to reach the semifinals of the men's draw in the Brisbane International's 10-year history.[31]

De Minaur received a special exempt spot in the main draw of the Sydney event, where he consecutively eliminated Fernando Verdasco, Damir Džumhur and Feliciano López to reach his second ATP Tour semifinal; he reached this milestone just one week after hing played in his first tour semifinal in Brisbane. De Minaur became the youngest player to play in two consecutive ATP Tour semifinals since Rafael Nadal in 2005.[32] He beat Frenchman Benoît Paire in the semifinals to meet Daniil Medvedev in the final.[33] De Minaur lost the final in three sets, hing won the opener.[34]

At the 2018 Australian Open, De Minaur lost in the first round to Tomáš Berdych but took a set off of the 19th seed.[35]

He was awarded a wildcard into the 2018 French Open,[36] but lost in the first round to British 16th seed Kyle Edmund.[37] Following this, he made two consecutive Challenger finals, losing to Jérémy Chardy at Surbiton, before defeating Dan Evans in straight sets to claim his first Challenger-level title at the Nottingham Open.[38]

He saw his best major results at-the-time during Wimbledon, defeating 29th seed and French Open semifinalist Marco Cecchinato and Pierre-Hugues Herbert to reach the third round, where he fell to world No.1 and second seed Rafael Nadal.[39]

In Washington, de Minaur defeated Vasek Pospisil, 11th seed Steve Johnson, eighth seed and Australian Open semifinalist Chung Hyeon and received a walkover over Andy Murray to reach the semifinals where he faced Andrey Rublev. De Minaur sed four match points while down 2–6 in the second set tiebreak, winning six points in a row to win it 8–6. He then won the final set 6–4 to reach his first ATP 500 final against Alexander Zverev, in which he went down 4–6, 2–6.[40] De Minaur entered the top 50 in the rankings for the first time at World No. 45 on 6 August 2018.[27]

At the US Open, de Minaur defeated Taro Daniel and Frances Tiafoe before losing to seventh seed Marin Čilić in five sets.[41] Later in the year, he replaced Nick Kyrgios as Australia's highest ranked male singles player.[42]

De Minaur qualified as the second seed into the 2018 Next Generation ATP Finals. He beat Andrey Rublev, Taylor Fritz, Liam Caruana in group stage. He then defeated Jaume Munar in the semifinals, before losing to top seed Stefanos Tsitsipas.[43]

2019: Three ATP titles, top 20[edit] De Minaur at the 2019 French Open

De Minaur began his year with a quarterfinal run in Brisbane, competing at a career-high of world No. 31 and resulting in him being seeded for a Grand Slam tournament for the first time in his career at the upcoming Australian Open.[44] At the Sydney International, straight-set victories over Dušan Lajović, Reilly Opelka, Jordan Thompson and Gilles Simon saw him return to the finals. He defeated Andreas Seppi (7–5, 7–6(5)) to claim his first career title.[45]

Seeded No. 27 at the 2019 Australian Open, he lost in the third round to Rafael Nadal.[46] De Minaur reached a then career-high ranking of World No. 24 in March 2019.[47] Following the Australian Open, De Minaur suffered a groin injury, sidelining him for two months.[48] At Wimbledon, De Minaur won his opening round before losing to Steve Johnson in the second round in five sets.[49] De Minaur made his fourth ATP Final in Atlanta where he defeated Taylor Fritz to clinch the trophy.[50] He did not face a single break point in the four matches he played during the tournament, winning 116 of 123 first serve points.[51][52]

At the US Open, de Minaur defeated Kei Nishikori in third round, earning his first career win over a top 10-ranked opponent.[53] He reached the fourth round for the first time in the event, however, lost to Grigor Dimitrov 7–5, 6–3, 6–4.[54]

In September, de Minaur claimed his third ATP title beating Frenchman Adrian Mannarino in two sets in the final of the Zhuhai Championships.[55] At the Swiss Indoors, De Minaur reached the final of an ATP 500 event for the second time in his career, losing to Roger Federer.[56][57] As a result, de Minaur reached a then career-high ranking of World No. 18.[58]

De Minaur qualified as the first seed into the 2019 Next Generation ATP Finals. He beat Alejandro Didovich Fokina, Miomir Kecmanović, Casper Ruud in group stage. He then beat Frances Tiafoe in the semis, before losing to Italian wildcard Jannik Sinner.[59]

2020: US Open quarterfinal[edit]

De Minaur started new season by playing for Australia at the first edition of the ATP Cup. He won his first two matches beating Alexander Zverev of Germany[60] and Denis Shapovalov of Canada.[61] Facing Great Britain in the quarterfinals, he lost his singles match to Dan Evans.[62] However, in doubles, he and Nick Kyrgios won a three-set thriller over Jamie Murray and Joe Salisbury to send Australia to the semifinals.[63] However, in the semifinals, he was defeated by Rafael Nadal.[64]

He withdrew from the first edition of the Adelaide International due to an abdominal strain.[65] He also withdrew from the Australian Open due to the same injury.[66] De Minaur returned from injury in February and played at the Mexican Open. He lost in the first round to Miomir Kecmanović.[67] Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, many of the ATP tour tournaments were suspended.

At the Cincinnati Masters, his first tournament since February, he was eliminated in the first round by Jan-Lennard Struff.[68] However, in doubles, De Minaur (partnered with Pablo Carreño Busta) won the 2020 Cincinnati Masters doubles title, defeating Jamie Murray and Neal Skupski in the final (6–2, 7–5).[69]

At the US Open, he reached his first Grand Slam quarterfinal, where he was beaten by eventual champion Dominic Thiem.[70]

In Rome, de Minaur was defeated in the first round by German qualifier Dominik Koepfer.[71] At the French Open, he was beaten in the first round by qualifier and 2018 semi-finalist, Marco Cecchinato.[72] At the European Open, de Minaur reached the final where he lost to Ugo Humbert.[73] Following this, at the Paris Masters, he was knocked out in the third round by eventual champion, Daniil Medvedev.[74]

He played his final tournament of the season at the Sofia Open, where he was defeated in the quarterfinals by the eventual champion Jannik Sinner.[75] De Minaur ended the year ranked No. 23.

2021: Fifth ATP title[edit]

De Minaur started his 2021 season at the Antalya Open. Seeded fourth, he won his fourth ATP singles title when his opponent, eighth seed Alexander Bublik, retired from the final due to a right ankle injury.[76] Playing for Australia at the 2021 ATP Cup, he lost both of his matches to Roberto Bautista Agut[77] and Stefanos Tsitsipas.[78] Seeded 21st at the Australian Open, he reached the third round where he was defeated by 16th seed Fabio Fognini.[79]

In March, de Minaur competed at the Rotterdam Open. Here, he was eliminated in the second round by Kei Nishikori.[80] Seeded ninth at the Dubai Championships, he fell in the second round to Jérémy Chardy.[81] Seeded 15th at the Miami Open, he suffered a second-round upset at the hands of Daniel Elahi Galán.[82]

Moving on to the clay-court season, de Minaur played at the Monte-Carlo Masters. He was beaten in the first round by Alejandro Didovich Fokina.[83] Seeded 14th at the Barcelona Open, he made it to the third round where he lost to second seed and eventual finalist, Stefanos Tsitsipas.[84] In Madrid, he was defeated in the third round by third seed and two-time finalist, Dominic Thiem.[85] At the Italian Open, he was eliminated in the first round by Italian wildcard Gianluca Mager.[86] Seeded 21st at the French Open, he was beaten in the second round by Marco Cecchinato.[87]

In June, De Minaur had a short but successful grass season. Seeded fourth at the Stuttgart Open, he reached the quarterfinals where he lost to Jurij Rodionov.[88] Seeded fourth at the Queen's Club, he made it to the semifinals where he fell to top seed Matteo Berrettini.[89] In doubles, he and Cameron Norrie reached the semifinals where they lost to Reilly Opelka/John Peers.[90] In the week before Wimbledon, he won his first title on grass and fifth in his career at the Eastbourne International defeating Lorenzo Sonego in the final.[91] With this run, he reached a new career-high singles ranking No. 15.[92] Seeded 15th at Wimbledon, he could not keep up his good form and lost in the first round to Sebastian Korda.[93]

De Minaur pulled out of the Tokyo Olympics due to testing positive for COVID-19.[94]

He returned to action in August at the Washington Open. Seeded third, he was defeated in the second round by Steve Johnson.[95] Seeded 12th at the Canadian Open, he was eliminated in the second round by Nikoloz Basilashvili.[96] Seeded 14th at the Western & Southern Open in Cincinnati, he fell in his second-round match to Gaël Monfils.[97] Seeded 14th at the US Open, he lost in the first round to Taylor Fritz.[98]

Seeded fourth at the Moselle Open, De Minaur's woes continued as he was defeated in the second round by Marcos Giron.[99] Seeded third in Sofia, he again lost in the second round to Giron.[100] Seeded 22nd at the Indian Wells Masters, he reached the fourth round where he faced second seed Stefanos Tsitsipas whom he pushed to three sets, but ended up losing the match.[101] Seeded sixth and last year finalist at the European Open, he fell in the first round to American qualifier Brandon Nakashima.[102] In Vienna, he was eliminated in his second-round match by second seed and eventual champion, Alexander Zverev.[103] At the Paris Masters, he was beaten in the first round by lucky loser and compatriot, Alexei Popyrin.[104]

De Minaur ended the year ranked No. 34.

2022: Major fourth round, Atlanta title[edit] De Minaur at the 2022 Monte-Carlo Masters

De Minaur started his 2022 season by representing Australia at the ATP Cup. Australia was in Group B alongside Italy, Russia, and France. In his first match, he beat world No. 7, Matteo Berrettini, of Italy, for his first victory against a top 10 player since 2020.[105] He then lost his second match to world No. 2, Daniil Medvedev of Russia, in straight sets.[106] In his final tie, he defeated Ugo Humbert of France.[107] In the end, Australia ended second in Group B. Seeded 32nd at the Australian Open, he reached the fourth round of a Grand Slam for the third time in his career and the first time at the Australian Open. He ended up losing to 11th seed and world No. 10, Jannik Sinner.[108]

In February, de Minaur competed at the Rotterdam Open. He reached the quarterfinals where he lost to top seed, world No. 4, and eventual finalist, Stefanos Tsitsipas.[109] In Dubai, he was defeated in the first round by Karen Khachanov.[110] Playing for Australia in the Dis Cup tie against Hungary, de Minaur helped Australia win the tie 3–2 over Hungary by beating Zsombor Piros and Márton Fucsovics.[111] Seeded 29th at Indian Wells, he made it to the fourth round where he was beaten by 20th seed and eventual champion, Taylor Fritz.[112] Seeded 25th at the Miami Open, he lost in the third round to third seed and world No. 5, Stefanos Tsitsipas.[113]

De Minaur started his clay-court season at the Monte-Carlo Masters. He lost in the second round to fifth seed, world No. 8, and last year finalist, Andrey Rublev, in three sets.[114] Seeded 10th at the Barcelona Open, he upset fourth seed and world No. 10, Cam Norrie in the quarterfinals.[115] He lost his semifinal match to fifth seed, world No. 11, and eventual champion, Carlos Alcaraz, in three sets, despite hing two match points at 7–6, 6–5.[116] In Madrid, he was defeated in the second round by tenth seed Jannik Sinner.[117] At the Italian Open, he reached the third round where he was beaten by second seed, world No. 3, and 2017 champion, Alexander Zverev.[118] Seeded fourth at the Lyon Open, he reached the semifinals where he fell to Alex Molčan.[119] Seeded 19th at the French Open, he was knocked out in the first round by world No. 74 ranked Frenchman, Hugo Gaston, in a five set match which lasted almost four hours.[120][121]

De Minaur started his grass-court season at the Libéma Open. Seeded fourth, he lost in the second round to 2019 champion Adrian Mannarino.[122] At the Queen's Club Championships, he upset eighth seed and world No. 18, Reilly Opelka, in the first round.[123] He was defeated in the second round by Alejandro Didovich Fokina.[124]

He won his sixth title at the 2022 Atlanta Open defeating James Duckworth, Adrian Mannarino, Ilya Ivashka and Jenson Brooksby in the final.[125][126]

He won his 150th match at the 2022 Stockholm Open defeating Benjamin Bonzi.[127] Next he defeated JJ Wolf and fourth seed Denis Shapovalov to reach the semifinals where he lost to Holger Rune.[128] The following week at the next tournament in Basel he lost again to Holger Rune in the first round.[129] At the 2022 Rolex Paris Masters he won in the first round against Sebastian Korda. He reached the third round for the third time at this tournament defeating world No. 3 Daniil Medvedev for his biggest and first top-5 win in 19 attempts.[130][131]

De Minaur ended the year with a singles rank of No. 24.

2023: ATP 500 title, top 20[edit]

Alex de Minaur began his 2023 season by competing for Australia in the Inaugural United Cup. He lost to Cameron Norrie of Great Britain in straight sets, before claiming the biggest win of his career against then-world No. 2, Rafael Nadal of Spain. De Minaur lost in the fourth round of the Australian Open to eventual champion Novak Djokovic, in straight sets winning only five games.[132]

At the Rotterdam Open, De Minaur recorded his third top-5 win, defeating Andrey Rublev in his opening match. He made it to the quarterfinals before losing to Grigor Dimitrov, after hing match points.[133]

In March, De Minaur won his seventh overall and first ATP 500 title at the Mexican Open, defeating Tommy Paul.[134] As a result, he returned to the top 20 in the rankings on 6 March 2023.[135]

Following this run, at the 2023 BNP Paribas Open he lost in the second round in less than an hour and a half to Marton Fucsovics hing received a bye in the first round.[136] At the 2023 Miami Open he also lost in the second round to Quentin Halys in a three hours and 20 minutes match with three tiebreaks.[137]

On grass, De Minaur reached a final at the Queen's Club Championships, losing to world No. 2 Carlos Alcaraz.[138] He lost at Wimbledon in the second round to the unseeded Matteo Berrettini.

At the 2023 Los Cabos Open, he made it to the final, where he lost to top seed Stefanos Tsitsipas. At the Canadian Open, he reached his first Masters 1000 final, beating back-to-back top ten players, Taylor Fritz and Daniil Medvedev, seeded eighth and second, respectively – hing previously never made it past the round of 16 at a Masters tournament. De Minaur lost in the final to Jannik Sinner in straight sets.[139] De Minaur's successful Canadian Open campaign was followed by a fourth round appearance at the US Open, where he was defeated by third seed Daniil Medvedev. Afterwards, De Minaur participated in the China Open, where he defeated Andy Murray in three sets after sing 3 match points in a lengthy 3-hour match, however, lost again to Medvedev in the following round. Consequently, he rose to a career-high singles ranking of world No. 11.

During the indoor hardcourt swing, De Minaur defeated Andy Murray again at the Paris Masters in three sets in his first round, after sing a match point, becoming the first person to beat Andy Murray in their first 6 attempts and the first person to beat Andy Murray on clay, grass and indoor and outdoor hard court.[140] In his next match, he defeated Dušan Lajović in 3 sets for his 200th career win.[141] De Minaur received a walkover from Jannik Sinner in the round of 16, sending him into his second Masters 1000 quarterfinal of his career (both appearances came this year). He lost in 3 sets to Andrey Rublev.[142]

2024: Win over No. 1, Three Major quarterfinals, top 10 & ATP Finals debuts[edit]

De Minaur started his year at the 2024 United Cup, where he lost to world No. 18, Cameron Norrie of Great Britain. He won against world No. 10, Taylor Fritz, in his first match of the year, to help Team Australia advance to the quarterfinals of the round-robin tournament, after they edged out the US and Great Britain in game-winning percentage.[143] In the quarterfinals, he upset Novak Djokovic 6–4, 6–4 on Australia's way to a 3–0 victory, his first win over a world No. 1, and handed Djokovic his first loss in Australia since Hyeon Chung beat him at the 2018 Australian Open.[144] In the semifinals, he came from a set down to notch his third consecutive top-10 victory of the tournament, after beating world No. 7 Alexander Zverev. However, Australia failed to progress to the finals, following a 1–2 defeat to eventual champions Germany.[145] As a result, he became the first Australian man to enter the world's top 10 since Lleyton Hewitt in 2006, and held the position for two weeks till 29 January 2024, marking the end of the 2024 Australian Open, where he reached the fourth round.[146][147]

In February, De Minaur competed at the Rotterdam Open, where he was seeded fifth. He reached the final after upsetting second seed and world No. 5, Andrey Rublev in the quarterfinals and then defeating Grigor Dimitrov in the semifinals.[148] In the finals, he lost to Jannik Sinner in straight sets, and thus, rose to a new career-high ranking of world No. 9.[149][150]

At the Mexican Open, De Minaur defended his Acapulco title, defeating Stefanos Tsitsipas in the quarterfinals for the first time and defeating Casper Ruud in the final in straight sets. By doing this, de Minaur became the first player to defend a title in Acapulco since Did Ferrer in 2012. At his following two tournaments, Indian Wells and Miami, he reached the fourth round, before losing to Alexander Zverev and Fábián Marozsán, respectively.

De Minaur began his clay season in Monte-Carlo where he defeated Stan Wawrinka, Tallon Griekspoor and Alexei Popyrin to reach his first Masters quarterfinal on clay. He lost to Novak Djokovic in straight sets. After receiving a bye, he then defeated Rafael Nadal at Barcelona, before losing to Arthur Fils in the third round. In Madrid, he again faced Nadal, but lost to him in straight sets. He fared better in Rome where he reached the fourth round, before losing to Stefanos Tsitsipas.

At the French Open, De Minaur was seeded 11th. He beat Alex Michelsen and Jaume Munar to make his best result at the tournament and reach the third round. There, he beat Jan-Lennard Struff in four sets to go a round further. In the fourth round, de Minaur beat Daniil Medvedev in four sets to become the first Australian man to reach the quarterfinals of the French Open since Lleyton Hewitt in 2004.[151] He lost to Alexander Zverev in the quarterfinals.[152] This run also resulted in his return to the top 10.

De Minaur at the 2024 Rosmalen Open

At the Rosmalen Open, De Minaur won his ninth ATP Tour singles title against Sebastian Korda in straight sets to start off the grass court season, becoming the first Australian to win the championship match since 2001. On the way to the title, he did not lose a set and also reached a career high of world No. 7 in the rankings on 17 June 2024.[153][154]

At Wimbledon, De Minaur made his first Wimbledon quarterfinals beating James Duckworth,[155] Jaume Munar,[156] Lucas Pouille (via walkover)[157] and Arthur Fils.[158][159] By getting to the fourth round, De Minaur became the first Australian in 19 years to reach four consecutive major fourth rounds, but withdrew before the quarterfinals due to a hip injury.[160][161]

At the US Open, he reached a third consecutive Grand Slam quarterfinal for the season without facing a seeded opponent, with wins over Marcos Giron, qualifier Otto Virtanen, Dan Evans and Jordan Thompson before losing in straight sets to seed 25 Jack Draper.[162]

De Minaur made his ATP Tour Finals debut in Turin, becoming the first Australian man to do it in singles since Lleyton Hewitt in 2004.[163]

2025: Australian Open quarterfinal, Third ATP 500 title[edit]

De Minaur started his 2025 season representing Australia at the United Cup, defeating Tomás Martín Etcheverry of Argentina and Billy Harris of Great Britain.[164][165] Despite this, Australia failed to progress out of the group stage.[166] De Minaur continued his good performance at the Australian Open, where he was seeded 8th, reaching the quarterfinals for the first time.[167] He was then defeated by top seed and eventual champion Jannik Sinner in straight sets.[168] De Minaur then made it to his first ATP 500 final of the year at the Rotterdam Open, though lost to Carlos Alcaraz in 3 sets.[169]

At Wimbledon, De Minaur reached the round of 16, after defeating Roberto Carballés, Arthur Cazaux, and August Holmgren. He then lost his round-4 battle with Novak Djokovic in four sets.[170]

Following Wimbledon, De Minaur reached the final of his second ATP 500 tournament for 2025 after defeating lucky loser Corentin Moutet at the Washington Open.[171] He then won his tenth overall and third ATP 500 title after defeating Alejandro Didovich Fokina in a third-set tiebreak.[172] As a result, he returned to the top 10 in the rankings.[173]

Playing style[edit] De Minaur competing in the Boys' Singles at the 2015 US Open

De Minaur is famous for his speed and agility on court, which he earned him the jocular title "Speed Demon" on the tour.[174]

He is known for his ability to retrieve seemingly impossible balls and hit winners from defensive positions or force opponents into making mistakes. His footwork and court coverage are considered some of the best on tour, though some he questioned the physical toll it could take on his body in the long-term. Despite this, his fighting spirit, "never say die" attitude and intensity on the court he earned him a huge fan base for a young player.[175]

His baseline game suits that of a counterpuncher, often retrieving balls and slowly constructing points. However, he is also known to inject sudden pace into rallies to surprise opponents, and often opts for a one-two combination on his serve, using the serve and a powerful groundstroke to end points quickly. His forehand is significantly better than his backhand on the offensive, and he often uses it to construct points or hit winners when attacking.[176]

De Minaur's serve is considered his main weakness in his game, with both his first and second serve being considerably weaker than his counterparts in terms of power and a relatively high double fault count, in which it's considered the main attacking point for opponents. His volleys were initially a weakness too, but he improved, moving towards a more transitional offensive game.[177]

Critics point out that despite his defensive capabilities, de Minaur does not possess any real weapons to use against top opponents. Some he argued his defensive game is unsustainable physically in the long-term and is not sufficient to challenge better players, as he tends to play himself out of aggressive positions.[178]

National representation[edit] ATP Cup[edit]

De Minaur made his ATP Cup debut for Australia in January 2020. He scored a victory against then world No.7 Alexander Zverev; which helped Australia claim a 3–0 victory over Germany and qualify for the quarterfinals.[179][180] Despite losing his singles match against Dan Evans for Great Britain, he teamed up with Nick Kyrgios for the doubles, where they won in three sets and advanced to the semifinals.[181] Team Australia then lost 3–0 to Spain in the semifinals.[182]

De Minaur returned for the 2021 edition but was ultimately knocked out in the group stage following a 3–0 loss to Spain and a loss in his singles match against Stefanos Tsitsipas.[183][184]

For the final edition of the tournament, de Minaur defeated world No. 7 Matteo Berrettini in straight sets to help Australia beat Italy 2–1.[185] Going against defending champions, Russia, the Australians lost 3–0, including a straight sets loss against Daniil Medvedev.[186] De Minaur then beat Ugo Humbert for a 2–1 win against France, though the team did not make it to the knockout stage.[187]

Dis Cup[edit]

In early February 2018, De Minaur made his Dis Cup debut for Australia at 18 years of age, against then world No.5 Alexander Zverev from Germany in the opening rubber. He fell just short of a spectacular upset, losing in a fifth-set tiebreaker after at one point leading 3–0, (40–Ad.) in the decider.[188]

Olympics[edit]

De Minaur was selected to represent Australia at the 2020 Tokyo Olympics (held in July 2021), but was forced to withdraw after testing positive for COVID-19.[189]

United Cup[edit]

De Minaur made his United Cup debut for Australia in December 2022. He scored a victory against the world No. 2 Rafael Nadal, his biggest career win thus far. It was his eight top-10 career win and only his second in the top-5.[190] Despite this win Australia did not advance out of the group into the knockout stage. In 2024, de Minaur and team Australia were much more successful, advancing to the semifinals, helped by de Minaur winning against 3 top 10 players, including world No. 1 Novak Djokovic.

Personal life[edit] de Minaur with Katie Boulter in 2024.

Since March 2020, de Minaur has been in a relationship with the British tennis player Katie Boulter.[191] The couple announced their engagement on 23 December 2024.[192][193]

Career statistics[edit] Main article: Alex de Minaur career statistics Grand Slam performance timelines[edit] Key W  F  SF QF #R RR Q# DNQ A NH (W) winner; (F) finalist; (SF) semifinalist; (QF) quarterfinalist; (#R) rounds 4, 3, 2, 1; (RR) round-robin stage; (Q#) qualification round; (DNQ) did not qualify; (A) absent; (NH) not held; (SR) strike rate (events won / competed); (W–L) win–loss record. To oid confusion and double counting, these charts are updated at the conclusion of a tournament or when the player's participation has ended.

Current through the 2025 US Open.

Tournament 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024 2025 2026 SR W–L Win % Australian Open Q1 2R 1R 3R A 3R 4R 4R 4R QF 0 / 8 18–8 69% French Open A 1R 1R 2R 1R 2R 1R 2R QF 2R 0 / 9 8–9 47% Wimbledon A Q2 3R 2R NH 1R 4R 2R QF 4R 0 / 7 13–6 68% US Open A 1R 3R 4R QF 1R 3R 4R QF QF 0 / 9 22–9 71% Win–loss 0–0 1–3 4–4 7–4 4–2 3–4 8–4 8–4 14–3 12–4 0–0 0 / 33 61–32 66% ATP 1000 tournament finals[edit] Singles: 1 (1 runner-up)[edit] Result Year Tournament Surface Opponent Score Loss 2023 Canadian Open Hard Jannik Sinner 4–6, 1–6 Doubles: 1 (1 title)[edit] Result Year Tournament Surface Partner Opponents Score Win 2020 Cincinnati Open Hard Pablo Carreño Busta Jamie Murray Neal Skupski 6–2, 7–5 Notes[edit] ^ /də mɪˈnɔːr/ də mih-NOR;[5] Spanish: Álex de Miñaur Román, pronounced [ˈaleɣs ðe miˈɲawɾ]; In isolation, Álex and de are pronounced Spanish pronunciation: [ˈaleks] and Spanish pronunciation: [de] respectively. References[edit] ^ Solsona, Joan (7 July 2018). 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ATP Tour. Archived from the original on 4 January 2023. Retrieved 18 January 2023. ^ English star Katie Boulter dedicates emotional Wimbledon win over Karolina Pliskova to late grandmother Archived 7 July 2022 at the Wayback Machine, ABC News Online, 1 July 2022 ^ Gabor, Martin (23 December 2024). "'About damn time': Demon pops question to tennis star partner... days before playing against her". Fox Sports Australia. Retrieved 23 December 2024. ^ "Boulter and De Minaur announce engagement". BBC Sport. 23 December 2024. Retrieved 23 December 2024. External links[edit] Wikimedia Commons has media related to Alex de Minaur. Alex de Minaur at the Association of Tennis Professionals Alex de Minaur at the International Tennis Federation Alex de Minaur at the Dis Cup (archived former page) Alex de Minaur at Tennis Australia Alex de Minaur at the Australian Olympic Committee Awards Preceded by Denis Shapovalov(Star of Tomorrow) ATP Newcomer of the Year 2018 Succeeded by Jannik Sinner vteAssociation of Tennis Professionals Top Australian male singles tennis playersAs of Dec 29, 2025 1. Alex de Minaur (7 ) 2. Alexei Popyrin (53 1) 3. Adam Walton (78 ) 4. Aleksandar Vukic (84 2) 5. James Duckworth (87 1) 6. Tristan Schoolkate (100 1) 7. Jordan Thompson (108 ) 8. Rinky Hijikata (113 1) 9. Christopher O'Connell (116 1) 10. Alex Bolt (171 ) vteWorld Top 10 tennis players as of 22 December 2025[update]ATP singlesATP doublesWTA singlesWTA doubles Carlos Alcaraz Jannik Sinner Alexander Zverev Novak Djokovic Félix Auger-Aliassime Taylor Fritz Alex de Minaur Lorenzo Musetti Ben Shelton Jack Draper Lloyd Glasspool Julian Cash Harri Heliövaara Henry Patten Horacio Zeballos Marcel Granollers Marcelo Arévalo Mate Pić Neal Skupski Joe Salisbury Aryna Sabalenka Iga Świątek Coco Gauff Amanda Anisimova Elena Rybakina Jessica Pegula Madison Keys Jasmine Paolini Mirra Andreeva Ekaterina Alexandrova Kateřina Siniaková Taylor Townsend Sara Errani Jasmine Paolini Elise Mertens Veronika Kudermetova Jeļena Ostapenko Erin Routliffe Hsieh Su-wei Gabriela Dabrowski Alex de Minaur's achievements vteAustralia — 2022 Dis Cup runners-up Alex de Minaur Jordan Thompson (knockout stage) Thanasi Kokkinakis Max Purcell Matthew Ebden Jason Kubler (group stage) Captain: Lleyton Hewitt vteAustralia — 2023 Dis Cup runners-up Alex de Minaur Alexei Popyrin Max Purcell Jordan Thompson Matthew Ebden Captain: Lleyton Hewitt vteATP Tour Masters 1000 doubles championsIndian Wells Open 1990: Boris Becker / Guy Forget 1991: Jim Courier / Jier Sánchez 1992: Steve DeVries / Did Macpherson 1999: Guy Forget / Henri Leconte 1994: Grant Connell / Patrick Galbraith 1995: Tommy Ho / Brett Steven 1996: Todd Woodbridge / Mark Woodforde 1997: Mark Knowles / Daniel Nestor 1998: Jonas Björkman / Pat Rafter 1999: Wayne Black / Sandon Stolle 2000: Alex O'Brien / Jared Palmer 2001: Wayne Ferreira / Yevgeny Kafelnikov 2002: Mark Knowles / Daniel Nestor 2003: Wayne Ferreira / Yevgeny Kafelnikov 2004: Arnaud Clément / Sébastien Grosjean 2005: Mark Knowles / Daniel Nestor 2006: Mark Knowles / Daniel Nestor 2007: Martin Damm / Leander Paes 2008: Jonathan Erlich / Andy Ram 2009: Mardy Fish / Andy Roddick 2010: Marc López / Rafael Nadal 2011: Alexandr Dolgopolov / Xier Malisse 2012: Marc López / Rafael Nadal 2013: Bob Bryan / Mike Bryan 2014: Bob Bryan / Mike Bryan 2015: Vasek Pospisil / Jack Sock 2016: Pierre-Hugues Herbert / Nicolas Mahut 2017: Ren Klaasen / Rajeev Ram 2018: John Isner / Jack Sock 2019: Nikola Mektić / Horacio Zeballos 2020: Cancelled (COVID-19 pandemic) 2021: John Peers / Filip Polášek 2022: John Isner / Jack Sock 2023: Rohan Bopanna / Matthew Ebden 2024: Wesley Koolhof / Nikola Mektić 2025: Marcelo Arévalo / Mate Pić Miami Masters 1990: Rick Leach / Jim Pugh 1991: Wayne Ferreira / Piet Norval 1992: Ken Flach / Todd Witsken 1993: Richard Krajicek / Jan Siemerink 1994: Jacco Eltingh / Paul Haarhuis 1995: Todd Woodbridge / Mark Woodforde 1996: Todd Woodbridge / Mark Woodforde 1997: Todd Woodbridge / Mark Woodforde 1998: Ellis Ferreira / Rick Leach 1999: Wayne Black / Sandon Stolle 2000: Todd Woodbridge / Mark Woodforde 2001: Jiří Novák / Did Rikl 2002: Mark Knowles / Daniel Nestor 2003: Roger Federer / Max Mirnyi 2004: Wayne Black / Kevin Ullyett 2005: Jonas Björkman / Max Mirnyi 2006: Jonas Björkman / Max Mirnyi 2007: Bob Bryan / Mike Bryan 2008: Bob Bryan / Mike Bryan 2009: Max Mirnyi / Andy Ram 2010: Lukáš Dlouhý / Leander Paes 2011: Mahesh Bhupathi / Leander Paes 2012: Leander Paes / Radek Štěpánek 2013: Aisam-ul-Haq Qureshi / Jean-Julien Rojer 2014: Bob Bryan / Mike Bryan 2015: Bob Bryan / Mike Bryan 2016: Pierre-Hugues Herbert / Nicolas Mahut 2017: Łukasz Kubot / Marcelo Melo 2018: Bob Bryan / Mike Bryan 2019: Bob Bryan / Mike Bryan 2020: Cancelled (COVID-19 pandemic) 2021: Nikola Mektić / Mate Pić 2022: Hubert Hurkacz / John Isner 2023: Santiago González / Édouard Roger-Vasselin 2024: Rohan Bopanna / Matthew Ebden 2025: Marcelo Arévalo / Mate Pić Monte-Carlo Masters 1990: Petr Korda / Tomáš Šmíd 1991: Luke Jensen / Laurie Warder 1992: Boris Becker / Michael Stich 1993: Stefan Edberg / Petr Korda 1994: Nicklas Kulti / Magnus Larsson 1995: Jacco Eltingh / Paul Haarhuis 1996: Ellis Ferreira / Jan Siemerink 1997: Donald Johnson / Francisco Montana 1998: Jacco Eltingh / Paul Haarhuis 1999: Olivier Delaître / Tim Henman 2000: Wayne Ferreira / Yevgeny Kafelnikov 2001: Jonas Björkman / Todd Woodbridge 2002: Jonas Björkman / Todd Woodbridge 2003: Mahesh Bhupathi / Max Mirnyi 2004: Tim Henman / Nenad Zimonjić 2005: Leander Paes / Nenad Zimonjić 2006: Jonas Björkman / Max Mirnyi 2007: Bob Bryan / Mike Bryan 2008: Rafael Nadal / Tommy Robredo 2009: Daniel Nestor / Nenad Zimonjić 2010: Daniel Nestor / Nenad Zimonjić 2011: Bob Bryan / Mike Bryan 2012: Bob Bryan / Mike Bryan 2013: Julien Benneteau / Nenad Zimonjić 2014: Bob Bryan / Mike Bryan 2015: Bob Bryan / Mike Bryan 2016: Pierre-Hugues Herbert / Nicolas Mahut 2017: Rohan Bopanna / Pablo Cuevas 2018: Bob Bryan / Mike Bryan 2019: Nikola Mektić / Franko Škugor 2020: Cancelled (COVID-19 pandemic) 2021: Nikola Mektić / Mate Pić 2022: Rajeev Ram / Joe Salisbury 2023: Ivan Dodig / Austin Krajicek 2024: Sander Gillé / Joran Vliegen 2025: Romain Arneodo / Manuel Guinard Hamburg / Madrid Masters 1990: Sergi Bruguera / Jim Courier 1991: Sergio Casal / Emilio Sánchez 1992: Sergio Casal / Emilio Sánchez 1993: Paul Haarhuis / Mark Koevermans 1994: Scott Melville / Piet Norval 1995: Wayne Ferreira / Yevgeny Kafelnikov 1996: Mark Knowles / Daniel Nestor 1997: Luis Lobo / Jier Sánchez 1998: Donald Johnson / Francisco Montana 1999: Wayne Arthurs / Andrew Kratzmann 2000: Todd Woodbridge / Mark Woodforde 2001: Jonas Björkman / Todd Woodbridge 2002: Mahesh Bhupathi / Jan-Michael Gambill 2003: Mark Knowles / Daniel Nestor 2004: Wayne Black / Kevin Ullyett 2005: Jonas Björkman / Max Mirnyi 2006: Paul Hanley / Kevin Ullyett 2007: Bob Bryan / Mike Bryan 2008: Daniel Nestor / Nenad Zimonjić 2009: Daniel Nestor / Nenad Zimonjić 2010: Bob Bryan / Mike Bryan 2011: Bob Bryan / Mike Bryan 2012: Mariusz Fyrstenberg / Marcin Matkowski 2013: Bob Bryan / Mike Bryan 2014: Daniel Nestor / Nenad Zimonjić 2015: Rohan Bopanna / Florin Mergea 2016: Jean-Julien Rojer / Horia Tecău 2017: Łukasz Kubot / Marcelo Melo 2018: Nikola Mektić / Alexander Peya 2019: Jean-Julien Rojer / Horia Tecău 2020: Cancelled (COVID-19 pandemic) 2021: Marcel Granollers / Horacio Zeballos 2022: Wesley Koolhof / Neal Skupski 2023: Karen Khachanov / Andrey Rublev 2024: Sebastian Korda / Jordan Thompson 2025: Marcel Granollers / Horacio Zeballos Rome Masters 1990: Sergio Casal / Emilio Sánchez 1991: Omar Camporese / Goran Ivanišević 1992: Jakob Hlasek / Marc Rosset 1993: Jacco Eltingh / Paul Haarhuis 1994: Yevgeny Kafelnikov / Did Rikl 1995: Cyril Suk / Daniel Vacek 1996: Byron Black / Grant Connell 1997: Mark Knowles / Daniel Nestor 1998: Mahesh Bhupathi / Leander Paes 1999: Ellis Ferreira / Rick Leach 2000: Martin Damm / Dominik Hrbatý 2001: Wayne Ferreira / Yevgeny Kafelnikov 2002: Martin Damm / Cyril Suk 2003: Wayne Arthurs / Paul Hanley 2004: Mahesh Bhupathi / Max Mirnyi 2005: Michaël Llodra / Fabrice Santoro 2006: Mark Knowles / Daniel Nestor 2007: Fabrice Santoro / Nenad Zimonjić 2008: Bob Bryan / Mike Bryan 2009: Daniel Nestor / Nenad Zimonjić 2010: Bob Bryan / Mike Bryan 2011: John Isner / Sam Querrey 2012: Marcel Granollers / Marc López 2013: Bob Bryan / Mike Bryan 2014: Daniel Nestor / Nenad Zimonjić 2015: Pablo Cuevas / Did Marrero 2016: Bob Bryan / Mike Bryan 2017: Pierre-Hugues Herbert / Nicolas Mahut 2018: Juan Sebastián Cabal / Robert Farah 2019: Juan Sebastián Cabal / Robert Farah 2020: Marcel Granollers / Horacio Zeballos 2021: Nikola Mektić / Mate Pić 2022: Nikola Mektić / Mate Pić 2023: Hugo Nys / Jan Zieliński 2024: Marcel Granollers / Horacio Zeballos 2025: Marcelo Arévalo / Mate Pić Canada Masters 1990: Paul Annacone / Did Wheaton 1991: Patrick Galbraith / Todd Witsken 1992: Patrick Galbraith / Danie Visser 1993: Jim Courier / Mark Knowles 1994: Byron Black / Jonathan Stark 1995: Yevgeny Kafelnikov / Andrei Olhovskiy 1996: Patrick Galbraith / Paul Haarhuis 1997: Mahesh Bhupathi / Leander Paes 1998: Martin Damm / Jim Grabb 1999: Jonas Björkman / Patrick Rafter 2000: Sébastien Lareau / Daniel Nestor 2001: Jiří Novák / Did Rikl 2002: Bob Bryan / Mike Bryan 2003: Mahesh Bhupathi / Max Mirnyi 2004: Mahesh Bhupathi / Leander Paes 2005: Wayne Black / Kevin Ullyett 2006: Bob Bryan / Mike Bryan 2007: Mahesh Bhupathi / Pel Vízner 2008: Daniel Nestor / Nenad Zimonjić 2009: Mahesh Bhupathi / Mark Knowles 2010: Bob Bryan / Mike Bryan 2011: Michaël Llodra / Nenad Zimonjić 2012: Bob Bryan / Mike Bryan 2013: Alexander Peya / Bruno Soares 2014: Alexander Peya / Bruno Soares 2015: Bob Bryan / Mike Bryan 2016: Ivan Dodig / Marcelo Melo 2017: Pierre-Hugues Herbert / Nicolas Mahut 2018: Henri Kontinen / John Peers 2019: Marcel Granollers / Horacio Zeballos 2020: Cancelled (COVID-19 pandemic) 2021: Rajeev Ram / Joe Salisbury 2022: Wesley Koolhof / Neal Skupski 2023: Marcelo Arévalo / Jean-Julien Rojer 2024: Marcel Granollers / Horacio Zeballos 2025: Julian Cash / Lloyd Glasspool Cincinnati Open 1990: Darren Cahill / Mark Kratzmann 1991: Ken Flach / Robert Seguso 1992: Todd Woodbridge / Mark Woodforde 1993: Andre Agassi / Petr Korda 1994: Alex O'Brien / Sandon Stolle 1995: Todd Woodbridge / Mark Woodforde 1996: Mark Knowles / Daniel Nestor 1997: Todd Woodbridge / Mark Woodforde 1998: Mark Knowles / Daniel Nestor 1999: Byron Black / Jonas Björkman 2000: Todd Woodbridge / Mark Woodforde 2001: Mahesh Bhupathi / Leander Paes 2002: James Blake / Todd Martin 2003: Bob Bryan / Mike Bryan 2004: Mark Knowles / Daniel Nestor 2005: Jonas Björkman / Max Mirnyi 2006: Jonas Björkman / Max Mirnyi 2007: Jonathan Erlich / Andy Ram 2008: Bob Bryan / Mike Bryan 2009: Daniel Nestor / Nenad Zimonjić 2010: Bob Bryan / Mike Bryan 2011: Mahesh Bhupathi / Leander Paes 2012: Robert Lindstedt / Horia Tecău 2013: Bob Bryan / Mike Bryan 2014: Bob Bryan / Mike Bryan 2015: Daniel Nestor / Édouard Roger-Vasselin 2016: Ivan Dodig / Marcelo Melo 2017: Pierre-Hugues Herbert / Nicolas Mahut 2018: Jamie Murray / Bruno Soares 2019: Ivan Dodig / Filip Polášek 2020: Pablo Carreño Busta / Alex de Minaur 2021: Marcel Granollers / Horacio Zeballos 2022: Rajeev Ram / Joe Salisbury 2023: Máximo González / Andrés Molteni 2024: Marcelo Arévalo / Mate Pić 2025: Nikola Mektić / Rajeev Ram Stockholm / Essen / Stuttgart / Madrid / Shanghai Masters 1990: Guy Forget / Jakob Hlasek 1991: John Fitzgerald / Anders Järryd 1992: Todd Woodbridge / Mark Woodforde 1993: Todd Woodbridge / Mark Woodforde 1994: Todd Woodbridge / Mark Woodforde 1995: Jacco Eltingh / Paul Haarhuis 1996: Sébastien Lareau / Alex O'Brien 1997: Todd Woodbridge / Mark Woodforde 1998: Sébastien Lareau / Alex O'Brien 1999: Byron Black / Jonas Björkman 2000: Jiří Novák / Did Rikl 2001: Max Mirnyi / Sandon Stolle 2002: Mark Knowles / Daniel Nestor 2003: Mahesh Bhupathi / Max Mirnyi 2004: Mark Knowles / Daniel Nestor 2005: Mark Knowles / Daniel Nestor 2006: Bob Bryan / Mike Bryan 2007: Bob Bryan / Mike Bryan 2008: Mariusz Fyrstenberg / Marcin Matkowski 2009: Julien Benneteau / Jo-Wilfried Tsonga 2010: Jürgen Melzer / Leander Paes 2011: Max Mirnyi / Daniel Nestor 2012: Leander Paes / Radek Štěpánek 2013: Ivan Dodig / Marcelo Melo 2014: Bob Bryan / Mike Bryan 2015: Ren Klaasen / Marcelo Melo 2016: John Isner / Jack Sock 2017: Henri Kontinen / John Peers 2018: Łukasz Kubot / Marcelo Melo 2019: Mate Pić / Bruno Soares 2020–2022: Cancelled (COVID-19 pandemic) 2023: Marcel Granollers / Horacio Zeballos 2024: Wesley Koolhof / Nikola Mektić 2025: Kevin Krawietz / Tim Pütz Paris Masters 1990: Scott Dis / Did Pate 1991: Anders Järryd / John Fitzgerald 1992: John McEnroe / Patrick McEnroe 1992: Byron Black / Jonathan Stark 1994: Jacco Eltingh / Paul Haarhuis 1995: Grant Connell / Patrick Galbraith 1996: Jacco Eltingh / Paul Haarhuis 1997: Jacco Eltingh / Paul Haarhuis 1998: Mahesh Bhupathi / Leander Paes 1999: Sébastien Lareau / Alex O'Brien 2000: Nicklas Kulti / Max Mirnyi 2001: Ellis Ferreira / Rick Leach 2002: Nicolas Escudé / Fabrice Santoro 2003: Wayne Arthurs / Paul Hanley 2004: Jonas Björkman / Todd Woodbridge 2005: Bob Bryan / Mike Bryan 2006: Arnaud Clément / Michaël Llodra 2007: Bob Bryan / Mike Bryan 2008: Jonas Björkman / Kevin Ullyett 2009: Daniel Nestor / Nenad Zimonjić 2010: Mahesh Bhupathi / Max Mirnyi 2011: Rohan Bopanna / Aisam-ul-Haq Qureshi 2012: Mahesh Bhupathi / Rohan Bopanna 2013: Bob Bryan / Mike Bryan 2014: Bob Bryan / Mike Bryan 2015: Ivan Dodig / Marcelo Melo 2016: Henri Kontinen / John Peers 2017: Łukasz Kubot / Marcelo Melo 2018: Marcel Granollers / Rajeev Ram 2019: Pierre-Hugues Herbert / Nicolas Mahut 2020: Félix Auger-Aliassime / Hubert Hurkacz 2021: Tim Pütz / Michael Venus 2022: Wesley Koolhof / Neal Skupski 2023: Santiago González / Édouard Roger-Vasselin 2024: Wesley Koolhof / Nikola Mektić 2025: Harri Heliövaara / Henry Patten vteAustralian Open boys' doubles champions 1922: C. Grogan / L. Roche 1923: Edgar Moon / L. Roche 1924: A. Berckelman / Ray Dunlop 1925: Jack Crawford / Harry Hopman 1926: Jack Crawford / Harry Hopman 1927: Jack Crawford / Harry Hopman 1928: Jack Crawford / C. Whiteman 1929: C.W. Cropper / W.B. Walker 1930: Adrian Quist / Don Turnbull 1931: Jack Purcell / Bert Tonkin 1932: Adrian Quist / Len Schwartz 1933: Jack Purcell / Bert Tonkin 1934: Neils Ennis / Colin McKenzie 1935: John Bromwich / Arthur Huxley 1936: John Gilchrist / Henry Lindo 1937: John Bromwich / Dinny Pails 1938: Dinny Pails / William Sidwell 1939: Roy Felan / H.N. Impey 1940: William Edwards / Dinny Pails 1946: Frank Herringe / George Worthington 1947: Rex Hartwig / Allan Kendall 1948: Don Candy / Ken McGregor 1949: John Blacklock / Clive Wilderspin 1950: Lew Hoad / Ken Rosewall 1951: Lew Hoad / Ken Rosewall 1952: Lew Hoad / Ken Rosewall 1953: William Gilmore / Warren Woodcock 1954: Mal Anderson / Roy Emerson 1955: Mike Green / Gerry Moss 1956: Paul Heamden / Bob Mark 1957: Frank Gorman / Rod Ler 1958: Bob Hewitt / Martin Mulligan 1959: José Luis Arilla / Butch Buchholz 1960: Greg Hughes / Jim Shepherd 1961: Rod Brent / John Newcombe 1962: William Bowrey / Geoffrey Knox 1963: Robert Brien / John Cotterill 1964: Stanley Matthews / Graham Stillwell 1965: Terence Musgre / John Walker 1966: Rorbert Layton / Pat McCumstie 1967: John Barlett / Sven Ginman 1968: Phil Dent / William Lloyd 1969: Neil Higgins / John James 1970: Allan McDonald / Greg Perkins 1971: John Marks / Michael Phillips 1972: Bill Durham / Steve Myers 1973: Terry Saunders / Graham Thoroughgood 1974: Did Carter / Trevor Little 1975: Glenn Busby / Warren Maher 1976: Peter McCarthy / Charlie Fancutt 1977 (Jan): Phil Dies / Peter Smylie 1977 (Dec): Ray Kelly / Geoffrey Thams 1978: Michael Fancutt / Bill Gilmour Jr. 1979: Michael Fancutt / Greg Whitecross 1980: William Masur / Craig Miller 1981: Did Lewis / Tony Withers 1982: Brendan Burke / Mark Hartnett 1983: Jamie Harty / Des Tyson 1984: Mike Baroch / Mark Kratzmann 1985: Brett Custer / Did Macpherson 1987: Jason Stoltenberg / Todd Woodbridge 1988: Jason Stoltenberg / Todd Woodbridge 1989: Johan Anderson / Todd Woodbridge 1990: Roger Pettersson / Mårten Renström 1991: Grant Doyle / Joshua Eagle 1992: Grant Doyle / Brad Sceney 1993: Lars Rehmann / Christian Tambue 1994: Ben Ellwood / Mark Philippoussis 1995: Luke Bourgeois / Lee Jong-min 1996: Daniele Bracciali / Jocelyn Robichaud 1997: Did Sherwood / James Trotman 1998: Julien Jeanpierre / Jérôme Haehnel 1999: Jürgen Melzer / Kristian Pless 2000: Nicolas Mahut / Tommy Robredo 2001: Ytai Abougzir / Luciano Vitullo 2002: Todd Reid / Ryan Henry 2003: Scott Oudsema / Phillip Simmonds 2004: Brendan Evans / Scott Oudsema 2005: Kim Sun-yong / Yi Chu-huan 2006: Błażej Koniusz / Grzegorz Panfil 2007: Graeme Dyce / Harri Heliövaara 2008: Hsieh Cheng-peng / Yang Tsung-hua 2009: Francis Alcantara / Hsieh Cheng-peng 2010: Justin Eleveld / Jannick Lupescu 2011: Filip Horanský / Jiří Veselý 2012: Liam Broady / Joshua Ward-Hibbert 2013: Jay Andrijic / Bradley Mousley 2014: Bradley Mousley / Lucas Miedler 2015: Jake Delaney / Marc Polmans 2016: Alex de Minaur / Blake Ellis 2017: Hsu Yu-hsiou / Zhao Lingxi 2018: Hugo Gaston / Clément Tabur 2019: Jonáš Forejtek / Dalibor Svrčina 2020: Nicholas Did Ionel / Leandro Riedi 2021: No competition (COVID-19 pandemic) 2022: Bruno Kuzuhara / Coleman Wong 2023: Learner Tien / Cooper Williams 2024: Maxwell Exsted / Cooper Woestendick 2025: Maxwell Exsted / Jan Kumstát Portals: Biography Australia Tennis Sport

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