Alex de Minaur

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Australia

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I'm feeling very comfortable on this surface - everything from my movement to my shape, to my understanding of how to construct points and what is going to be effective for me.

Alex de Minaur, 27 May 2025
Alex de Minaur celebrates a winning shot

Biography

On Court

  • Won the Australian 14/u Championships at Melbourne Park in December 2013 and the 16/u Australian Championships the following year
  • Contested his first Futures tournaments in Spain in July 2015; debuted on the ATP rankings in August 2015 at No.1544
  • Reached the US Open 2015 boys’ singles semifinals
  • Represented Australia in the Junior Davis Cup final of 2015 in Madrid, Spain
  • Progressed to first professional final at ITF Futures event in Spain in February 2016
  • At Wimbledon 2016, advanced to the boys’ singles final
  • Won his first ITF Futures title in 2017 in Portugal
  • Made ATP Challenger debut in 2016 in Canberra
  • Favourite surface is grass
  • Made Grand Slam debut in 2017 at the Australian Open
  • Won the Australian Open Play-off in December 2017, to earn a wildcard at AO2018
  • Won his first ATP Challenger title at the 2018 Nottingham Open
  • Cracked the top 50 after reaching his second ATP final of 2018 in Washington DC (first came at the Sydney International)
  • Became Australia’s No.1 male player on 8 October 2018 (when he rose to a then career-high ranking of No.33)
  • Made top 100 debut in doubles in August 2020 after winning ATP Masters 1000 title with Spain’s Pablo Carreno Busta at Cincinnati
  • Made first Grand Slam singles quarterfinal at the US Open in 2020
  • Won first ATP-level grass-court title at Eastbourne in June 2021, propelling him into the world’s top 15 for the first time
  • Played a starring role to help Australia reach the 2022 Davis Cup final
  • Won his seventh career tour title in Acapulco in March 2023 – his first at ATP 500 level
  • Reached his first ATP Masters 1000 final in Toronto in August 2023
  • Scored three top-10 wins representing Australia at the United Cup in 2024
  • Made his top-10 debut in January 2024, becoming the first Australian man to hold a top-10 ranking in 17 years.
  • Defended an ATP title for the first time in March 2024, with his second straight triumph in Acapulco
  • Rose to a career-high world No.6 after advancing to the singles quarterfinals at Wimbledon 2024
  • Made his Olympic debut in Paris 2024, playing doubles alongside Alexei Popyrin. A hip injury prevented De Minaur from contesting singles.
  • Newcombe Medal 2024 winner
  • Reached the ATP Finals for the first time in 2024
  • Made his maiden Australian Open quarterfinal in 2025, his fourth straight Grand Slam quarterfinal
  • Won the third ATP 500 title of his career in Washington, DC in 2025, having saved three championship points against Alejandro Davidovich Fokina
  • Only player unbeaten in three matches at Laver Cup in Team World's victory over Team Europe in San Francisco in 2025

Off Court

  • Lived in Sydney until age five before relocating to Spain; has since moved between Australia and Spain
  • Mother is Spanish, father is Uruguayan; has three younger siblings (two sisters and one brother)
  • Speaks English and Spanish.

Statistics

Key statistics

Age
26
Height183cm
Born17 February 1999
Birth PlaceSydney, Australia
LivesAlicante, Spain
PlaysRight-handed, two-handed backhand
CoachAdolfo Gutierrez

Singles titles

  • 2025: Washington
  • 2024: Acapulco, 's-Hertogenbosch
  • 2023: Acapulco
  • 2022: Atlanta
  • 2021: Antalya, Eastbourne
  • 2019: Sydney International, Atlanta, Zhuhai
  • 2018: Nottingham Challenger
  • 2017: M15 Povoa de Varzim

Singles finals

  • 2025: Rotterdam
  • 2024: Rotterdam
  • 2023: Queen’s, Los Cabos, Toronto Masters
  • 2020: Antwerp
  • 2019: Basel, ATP Next Gen Finals
  • 2018: Sydney International, Alicante Challenger, Surbiton Challenger, Washington, ATP Next Gen Finals
  • 2017: Segovia Challenger

Doubles titles

  • 2020 Cincinnati Masters (w/ Pablo Carreno Busta)
  • 2017 M15 Povoa de Varzim
  • 2016 M10 Madrid

Doubles finals

  • 2016 M10 Lleida

Year-end singles ranking history

YearAustralian ranking
20249
202312
202224
202134
202023
201918
201831
2017208
2016354
20151551

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