When the Australian Open men’s singles draw is made this week, take note of where Andrey Rublev and hometown favorite Alex de Minaur are placed this year. The insidious Grand Slam quarterfinal hex weighs heavily on both men.
Accomplished as they are, frequent guests in the prestigious “second week” of majors, neither man has ever contested a semifinal. At the 2024 Australian Open, they met in the fourth round. Had it been one round later, the hex would have been lifted for the winner. Instead, No. 5 seed Rublev prevailed over de Minaur in a brutal five-setter, then lost in the quarters to the new Italian star. Jannik Sinner.
It was Rublev’s 10th unsuccessful quarterfinal. The 28-year old Russian hasn’t gone that deep since, and his ranking is down to No. 16.
Repeated failures in major quarterfinals hearkens to that hoary question, “Is a glass half full—or half empty?” For first or second-time quarterfinalists, it is most decidedly half-full. But for those who have repeatedly failed to advance, like Rublev or de Minaur, the glass is painfully, even glaringly, half-empty.


