Alex de Minaur will be the first Australian to compete in singles at the ATP Finals since Lleyton Hewitt 20 years ago, after securing his place in the elite eight-player field in Turin.
Turin, Italy, 6 November 2024 | Ian Chadband (AAP)
After 10 long months, competing at 20 tournaments in 10 different countries, battling against a debilitating injury while winning 47 of 63 hard-fought matches, Alex de Minaur has at last got his just desserts.
He will go, for the first time in his ever-improving career, to the big end-of-season ball, the ATP Finals in Turin.
The Australian No.1 received the good news on Tuesday as Novak Djokovic’s announcement that he was withdrawing from next week’s showpiece ensured De Minaur, Andrey Rublev and Casper Ruud were all guaranteed the last three places in the eight-man tournament at the Inalpi Arena.
The field is SET 🔥
This is the #NittoATPFinals Class of 2024 🎓
See you in Torino! pic.twitter.com/BraMV1YFm5
— ATP Tour (@atptour) November 5, 2024
De Minaur was scheduled to play this week’s ATP event in Belgrade but has since withdrawn, giving him a much-needed four-day break after three straight weeks of competition in Europe.
And what an opportunity awaits ‘Demon’.
Djokovic’s injury withdrawal means the ATP Finals will be without any of the ‘Big Three’ of men’s tennis – Djokovic, Roger Federer and Rafa Nadal – for the first time in 23 years.
But it will also mean there’ll be an Australian man gracing the top-eight showdown for the first time in 20 years since Lleyton Hewitt got to the 2004 final and was beaten by Federer.
De Minaur joins Australian doubles qualifiers Max Purcell, Jordan Thompson and Matt Ebden at the season-ending event.
The eight-man, week-long tournament begins on Sunday with the two round-robin groups draw being made on Thursday.
There will be, of course, no easy matches for eighth-ranked De Minaur, with Jannik Sinner, Alexander Zverev, Carlos Alcaraz, Daniil Medvedev and Taylor Fritz making up the rest of the field.
De Minaur has a winning record against Ruud (2-0), Rublev (4-3) and Fritz (5-3), losing ones against Medvedev (3-6) and Alcaraz (0-2), and one-sided ones against Zverev (2-8) and Sinner (0-7).
The ATP Finals offers a prize pool of $US15.25 million ($A23.11 million), with the singles champion having the chance to earn a record-breaking $US4.8 million ($A7.3 million) — the largest winner’s prize on the men’s tour — if he can triumph without losing a match.
For De Minaur, the great news about his own flourishing career came just the day after he put his name to the newly-branded Australian Junior Tour, which will now be known as the De Minaur Junior Tour.
> MORE: De Minaur champions future of Aussie tennis ahead of Junior Tour Finals
It’s part of the Sydneysider’s commitment, alongside Tennis Australia’s, to nurturing the country’s future tennis stars.
He’s working with the governing body to establish a scholarship program designed to support high-achieving juniors, ensuring they have the resources and mentorship they need.
“I’ve been fortunate to have learnt so much from my mentors over the years,” said de Minaur.
“I want to pass on the knowledge I’ve gathered throughout my journey and help young Aussie athletes to improve and become the best version they can be.”
ATP Finals field
[1] Jannik Sinner (ITA)
[2] Alexander Zverev (GER)
[3] Carlos Alcaraz (ESP)
[4] Daniil Medvedev
[5] Taylor Fritz (USA)
[7] Casper Ruud (NOR)
[8] Alex de Minaur (AUS)
[9] Andrey Rublev