Alex Michelsen upsets Tsitsipas at 
		the Australian Open and thanks his Mom 
		 
		 
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			 [January 13, 2025]  
			MELBOURNE, Australia (AP) — Alex Michelsen produced the 
			biggest win so far of his fledgling career to upset 2023 runner-up 
			Stefanos Tsitsipas in the first round of the Australian Open, and he 
			knew instinctively where credit was due. 
			 
			The 20-year-old American overcame nerves on his serve in the fourth 
			set before clinching a 7-5, 6-3, 2-6, 6-4 win Monday over Tsitsipas, 
			a 26-year-old from Greece who has a career-high No. 3 ranking and 
			has contested two Grand Slam finals. 
			 
			Michelsen started playing tennis around age 3 and hit most days as a 
			kid with his mother, Sondra, a school teacher who played college 
			tennis. 
			 
			“Yeah, I’m sure she’s watching right now,” Michelsen told the crowd 
			on John Cain Arena, one of the three main show courts at Melbourne 
			Park. "Yeah, we hit a million balls from the baseline every day. 
			We’d go like 30 minutes up the middle, then we go across each way 
			for like an hour and a half. 
			 
			“I mean we would just go out there and she would never miss a ball — 
			she’s incredible. But no chance I’d be here without without her, so 
			thanks Mom. Love you." 
			 
			The No. 42-ranked Michelsen reached the third round last year on his 
			Australia debut before losing in the first rounds at Roland Garros 
			and Wimbledon and in the second round at the U.S. Open. 
			 
			His win over Tsitsipas was Michelsen's first against a player ranked 
			in the top 20 at a Grand Slam. 
			 
			He played with freedom against Tsitsipas, taking big swipes with his 
			service returns — including three in the ninth game of the fourth 
			set that helped earn him a vital break. 
			 
			He got a bit tense on serve, surrendering two hard-earned breaks in 
			the fourth set, but stayed composed in the last game. 
			 
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            Alex Michelsen of the U.S. reacts as he is interviewed on court 
			following his first round win over Stefanos Tsitsipas of Greece at 
			the Australian Open tennis championship in Melbourne, Australia, 
			Monday, Jan. 13, 2025. (AP Photo/Ng Han Guan) 
              
 
			 “Yeah, I didn’t take the most direct path, that’s 
			for sure. Shouldn’t have got broken twice in the fourth. My serve 
			let me down. Served double faulting way too much,” he said. "But I 
			was also returning really, really well. I felt like I was winning 
			most of the baseline rallies when I was inside the baseline and 
			controlling the point. 
			 
			“So I was thinking at 4-all, after I got broken twice, saying, 
			‘You’re still in this, just play every point for what it is.’ I 
			played a great 4-all game and got it done at 5-4.” 
			 
			He finished the match with eight aces and eight double-faults, but 
			hit 46 winners to only 40 unforced errors. 
			 
			“First of all, I was just trying to stay super composed out there. I 
			knew it was going to be a battle in the end,” he said. "It’s all 
			about the mindset.” 
			
			
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