By Richard Pagliaro | Tuesday, January 17, 2023
Final levels have been as soon as Dominic Thiem’s area.
These days, Thiem continues dealing with beginning stumbles.
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The 2020 Australian Open finalist suffered a strained belly or rib harm that inhibited his serve in a 6-3, 6-4, 6-2 loss to fifth-seeded Andrey Rublev in his AO opener.
Afterward Thiem candidly conceded neither his body nor his sport is on the stage required to topple a Top-5 seed like Rublev in a Grand Slam.
“Honestly, I don’t think that even on my 100% I’m not able to beat Rublev yet or while he is top 5 seed here, even in a really fit situation,” Thiem advised the media in Melbourne. “I reckon it would be very, very tough to beat him and with the issue like the abs, it’s going to be almost impossible.”
It was Thiem’s third straight Grand Slam opening-round exit and his fourth first-round loss in his final 5 majors.
Those outcomes do not dim Thiem’s dedication to the trigger.
The 99th-ranked Austrian stated he is all in on going onward and upward.
“But, yeah, the direction doesn’t really — it doesn’t really change after that defeat,” Thiem stated. “I tried to go forward and, yeah, tried to make it better in next tournaments.”
After enduring a couple of 10-month hiatus from the game because of a power wrist harm, Thiem stated he is optimistic he’ll discover his kind—if he stays wholesome—and compete with the elite once more.
“Of course, that’s the ultimate goal, and I hope that I can do it now during this season if I have a draw like that, like here in Australia against a top-10 player, top-5 seed to go out on court and to believe that I can win it,” Thiem stated.
If that seems like a mission unimaginable, take into account Thiem made historical past when he fought again from a two-set deficit to beat Alexander Zverev and seize the 2020 US Open title. Thiem joined Hall of Famer Pancho Gonzales as the one males in historical past to rally from a two-set deficit and win a US Open closing.
The two-time Roland Garros runner-up goals to get in tune throughout the upcoming South American clay-court season.
“In the beginning [the comeback] was way tougher than I expected. Also, I was playing way worse than I was expecting, so it was a tough way back, but things changed,” Thiem stated. “Especially towards Autumn, towards the last tournament of the year. There I was playing pretty decent.
“As I stated, this match does not change something as a result of I simply had a very robust opponent. Yeah, I hope that I can enhance the outcomes on the South American clay.”
Photo credit score: Cameron Spencer/Getty